DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
REGEX(3) DragonFly Library Functions Manual REGEX(3)
NAME
regcomp, regcomp_l, regerror, regexec, regfree, regncomp, regncomp_l,
regnexec, regwcomp, regwcomp_l, regwexec, regwncomp, regwncomp_l,
regwnexec - regular-expression library
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
(Standards-compliant APIs)
#include <regex.h>
int
regcomp(regex_t *restrict preg, const char *restrict pattern,
int cflags);
size_t
regerror(int errcode, const regex_t *restrict preg,
char *restrict errbuf, size_t errbuf_size);
int
regexec(const regex_t *restrict preg, const char *restrict string,
size_t nmatch, regmatch_t pmatch[restrict], int eflags);
void
regfree(regex_t *preg);
(Non-portable extensions)
int
regncomp(regex_t *restrict preg, const char *restrict pattern,
size_t len, int cflags);
int
regnexec(const regex_t *restrict preg, const char *restrict string,
size_t len, size_t nmatch, regmatch_t pmatch[restrict], int eflags);
int
regwcomp(regex_t *restrict preg, const wchar_t *restrict widepat,
int cflags);
int
regwexec(const regex_t *restrict preg, const wchar_t *restrict widestr,
size_t nmatch, regmatch_t pmatch[restrict], int eflags);
int
regwncomp(regex_t *restrict preg, const wchar_t *restrict widepat,
size_t len, int cflags);
int
regwnexec(const regex_t *restrict preg, const wchar_t *restrict widestr,
size_t len, size_t nmatch, regmatch_t pmatch[restrict], int eflags);
#include <regex.h>
#include <xlocale.h>
int
regcomp_l(regex_t *restrict preg, const char *restrict pattern,
int cflags, locale_t restrict);
int
regncomp_l(regex_t *restrict preg, const char *restrict pattern,
size_t len, int cflags, locale_t restrict);
int
regwcomp_l(regex_t *restrict preg, const wchar_t *restrict widepat,
int cflags, locale_t restrict);
int
regwncomp_l(regex_t *restrict preg, const wchar_t *restrict widepat,
size_t len, int cflags, locale_t restrict);
DESCRIPTION
These routines implement IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2") regular expressions
("RE"s); see re_format(7). The regcomp() function compiles an RE,
written as a string, into an internal form. regexec() matches that
internal form against a string and reports results. regerror()
transforms error codes from either into human-readable messages.
regfree() frees any dynamically-allocated storage used by the internal
form of an RE.
The header <regex.h> declares two structure types, regex_t and
regmatch_t, the former for compiled internal forms and the latter for
match reporting. It also declares the four functions, a type regoff_t,
and a number of constants with names starting with "REG_".
The regcomp() function compiles the regular expression contained in the
pattern string, subject to the flags in cflags, and places the results in
the regex_t structure pointed to by preg. The cflags argument is the
bitwise OR of zero or more of the following flags:
REG_EXTENDED Compile modern ("extended") REs, rather than the obsolete
("basic") REs that are the default.
REG_BASIC This is a synonym for 0, provided as a counterpart to
REG_EXTENDED to improve readability.
REG_NOSPEC Compile with recognition of all special characters turned
off. All characters are thus considered ordinary, so the
"RE" is a literal string. This is an extension, compatible
with but not specified by IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2"), and
should be used with caution in software intended to be
portable to other systems. REG_EXTENDED and REG_NOSPEC may
not be used in the same call to regcomp().
REG_LITERAL An alias of REG_NOSPEC.
REG_ICASE Compile for matching that ignores upper/lower case
distinctions. See re_format(7).
REG_NOSUB Compile for matching that need only report success or
failure, not what was matched.
REG_NEWLINE Compile for newline-sensitive matching. By default,
newline is a completely ordinary character with no special
meaning in either REs or strings. With this flag, `[^'
bracket expressions and `.' never match newline, a `^'
anchor matches the null string after any newline in the
string in addition to its normal function, and the `$'
anchor matches the null string before any newline in the
string in addition to its normal function.
REG_PEND (Note that REG_PEND is not recognized by any of the wide
character or "n" variants. Besides, the "n" variants can
be used instead of REG_PEND; see EXTENDED APIS below.) The
regular expression ends, not at the first NUL, but just
before the character pointed to by the re_endp member of
the structure pointed to by preg. The re_endp member is of
type const char *. This flag permits inclusion of NULs in
the RE; they are considered ordinary characters. This is
an extension, compatible with but not specified by IEEE Std
1003.2 ("POSIX.2"), and should be used with caution in
software intended to be portable to other systems.
REG_ENHANCED Recognized enhanced regular expression features; see
re_format(7) for details. This is an extension not
specified by IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2"), and should be
used with caution in software intended to be portable to
other systems.
REG_MINIMAL Use minimal (non-greedy) repetitions instead of the normal
greedy ones; see re_format(7) for details. (This only
applies when both REG_ENHANCED and REG_EXTENDED are also
set.) This is an extension not specified by IEEE Std
1003.2 ("POSIX.2"), and should be used with caution in
software intended to be portable to other systems.
REG_UNGREEDY Alias of REG_MINIMAL.
When successful, regcomp() returns 0 and fills in the structure pointed
to by preg. One member of that structure (other than re_endp) is
publicized: re_nsub, of type size_t, contains the number of parenthesized
subexpressions within the RE (except that the value of this member is
undefined if the REG_NOSUB flag was used). If regcomp() fails, it
returns a non-zero error code; see RETURN VALUES.
The regexec() function matches the compiled RE pointed to by preg against
the string, subject to the flags in eflags, and reports results using
nmatch, pmatch, and the returned value. The RE must have been compiled
by a previous invocation of regcomp(). The compiled form is not altered
during execution of regexec(), so a single compiled RE can be used
simultaneously by multiple threads.
By default, the NUL-terminated string pointed to by string is considered
to be the text of an entire line, minus any terminating newline. The
eflags argument is the bitwise OR of zero or more of the following flags:
REG_NOTBOL The first character of the string is not the beginning of a
line, so the `^' anchor should not match before it. This
does not affect the behavior of newlines under REG_NEWLINE.
REG_NOTEOL The NUL terminating the string does not end a line, so the
`$' anchor should not match before it. This does not
affect the behavior of newlines under REG_NEWLINE.
REG_STARTEND The string is considered to start at string +
pmatch[0].rm_so and to have a terminating NUL located at
string + pmatch[0].rm_eo (there need not actually be a NUL
at that location), regardless of the value of nmatch. See
below for the definition of pmatch and nmatch. This is an
extension, compatible with but not specified by IEEE Std
1003.2 ("POSIX.2"), and should be used with caution in
software intended to be portable to other systems. Note
that a non-zero rm_so does not imply REG_NOTBOL;
REG_STARTEND affects only the location of the string, not
how it is matched.
See re_format(7) for a discussion of what is matched in situations where
an RE or a portion thereof could match any of several substrings of
string.
Normally, regexec() returns 0 for success and the non-zero code
REG_NOMATCH for failure. Other non-zero error codes may be returned in
exceptional situations; see RETURN VALUES.
If REG_NOSUB was specified in the compilation of the RE, or if nmatch is
0, regexec() ignores the pmatch argument (but see below for the case
where REG_STARTEND is specified). Otherwise, pmatch points to an array
of nmatch structures of type regmatch_t. Such a structure has at least
the members rm_so and rm_eo, both of type regoff_t (a signed arithmetic
type at least as large as an off_t and a ssize_t), containing
respectively the offset of the first character of a substring and the
offset of the first character after the end of the substring. Offsets
are measured from the beginning of the string argument given to
regexec(). An empty substring is denoted by equal offsets, both
indicating the character following the empty substring.
The 0th member of the pmatch array is filled in to indicate what
substring of string was matched by the entire RE. Remaining members
report what substring was matched by parenthesized subexpressions within
the RE; member i reports subexpression i, with subexpressions counted
(starting at 1) by the order of their opening parentheses in the RE, left
to right. Unused entries in the array (corresponding either to
subexpressions that did not participate in the match at all, or to
subexpressions that do not exist in the RE (that is, i > preg->re_nsub))
have both rm_so and rm_eo set to -1. If a subexpression participated in
the match several times, the reported substring is the last one it
matched. (Note, as an example in particular, that when the RE `(b*)+'
matches `bbb', the parenthesized subexpression matches each of the three
`b's and then an infinite number of empty strings following the last `b',
so the reported substring is one of the empties.)
If REG_STARTEND is specified, pmatch must point to at least one
regmatch_t (even if nmatch is 0 or REG_NOSUB was specified), to hold the
input offsets for REG_STARTEND. Use for output is still entirely
controlled by nmatch; if nmatch is 0 or REG_NOSUB was specified, the
value of pmatch[0] will not be changed by a successful regexec().
The regerror() function maps a non-zero errcode from either regcomp() or
regexec() to a human-readable, printable message. If preg is non-NULL,
the error code should have arisen from use of the regex_t pointed to by
preg, and if the error code came from regcomp(), it should have been the
result from the most recent regcomp() using that regex_t. The
(regerror() may be able to supply a more detailed message using
information from the regex_t.) The regerror() function places the NUL-
terminated message into the buffer pointed to by errbuf, limiting the
length (including the NUL) to at most errbuf_size bytes. If the whole
message will not fit, as much of it as will fit before the terminating
NUL is supplied. In any case, the returned value is the size of buffer
needed to hold the whole message (including terminating NUL). If
errbuf_size is 0, errbuf is ignored but the return value is still
correct.
If the errcode given to regerror() is first ORed with REG_ITOA, the
"message" that results is the printable name of the error code, e.g.
"REG_NOMATCH", rather than an explanation thereof. If errcode is
REG_ATOI, then preg shall be non-NULL and the re_endp member of the
structure it points to must point to the printable name of an error code;
in this case, the result in errbuf is the decimal digits of the numeric
value of the error code (0 if the name is not recognized). REG_ITOA and
REG_ATOI are intended primarily as debugging facilities; they are
extensions, compatible with but not specified by IEEE Std 1003.2
("POSIX.2"), and should be used with caution in software intended to be
portable to other systems. Be warned also that they are considered
experimental and changes are possible.
The regfree() function frees any dynamically-allocated storage associated
with the compiled RE pointed to by preg. The remaining regex_t is no
longer a valid compiled RE and the effect of supplying it to regexec() or
regerror() is undefined.
None of these functions references global variables except for tables of
constants; all are safe for use from multiple threads if the arguments
are safe.
EXTENDED APIS
These extended APIs are available in Mac OS X 10.8 and beyond, when the
deployment target is 10.8 or later. It should also be noted that any of
the regcomp() variants may be used to initialize a regex_t structure,
that can then be passed to any of the regexec() variants. So it is quite
legal to compile a wide character RE and use it to match a multibyte
character string, or vice versa.
The regncomp() routine compiles regular expressions like regcomp(), but
the length of the regular expression string is specified, allowing a
string that is not NUL terminated and/or contains NUL characters. This
is a modern replacement for using regcomp() with the REG_PEND option.
Similarly, the regnexec() routine is like regexec(), but the length of
the string to match is specified, allowing a string that is not NUL
terminated and/or contains NUL characters.
The regwcomp() and regwexec() variants take a wide-character (wchar_t)
string for the regular expression and string to match. And regwncomp()
and regwnexec() are variants that allow specifying the wide character
string length, and so allows wide character strings that are not NUL
terminated and/or contains NUL characters.
INTERACTION WITH THE LOCALE
When regcomp() or one of its variants is run, the regular expression is
compiled into an internal form, which may include specific information
about the locale currently in effect, such as equivalence classes or
multi-character collation symbols. So a reference to the current locale
is also stored with the internal form, so that when regexec() is run, it
can use the same locale (even if the locale is changed in-between the
calls to regcomp() and regexec()).
To provide more direct control over which locale is used, routines with
"_l" appended to their names are provided that work just like the
variants without the "_l", except that a locale (via a locale_t variable
type) is specified directly. Note that only variants of regcomp() have
"_l" variants, since the regexec() variants just use the reference to the
locale stored in the internal form.
IMPLEMENTATION CHOICES
The regex implementation in Mac OS X 10.8 and later is based on a heavily
modified subset of TRE (http://laurikari.net/tre/). This provides
improved performance, better conformance and additional features.
However, both API and binary compatibility have been maintained with
previous releases, so binaries built on previous releases should work on
10.8 and later, and binaries built on 10.8 and later should be able to
run on previous releases (as long as none of the new variants or new
features are used.
There are a number of decisions that IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2") leaves
up to the implementor, either by explicitly saying "undefined" or by
virtue of them being forbidden by the RE grammar. This implementation
treats them as follows.
See re_format(7) for a discussion of the definition of case-independent
matching.
There is no particular limit on the length of REs, except insofar as
memory is limited. Memory usage is approximately linear in RE size, and
largely insensitive to RE complexity, except for bounded repetitions.
See BUGS for one short RE using them that will run almost any system out
of memory.
A backslashed character other than one specifically given a magic meaning
by IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2") (such magic meanings occur only in
obsolete ["basic"] REs) is taken as an ordinary character.
Any unmatched `[' is a REG_EBRACK error.
Equivalence classes cannot begin or end bracket-expression ranges. The
endpoint of one range cannot begin another.
RE_DUP_MAX, the limit on repetition counts in bounded repetitions, is
255.
A repetition operator (`?', `*', `+', or bounds) cannot follow another
repetition operator, except for the use of `?' for minimal repetition
(for enhanced extended REs; see re_format(7) for details). A repetition
operator cannot begin an expression or subexpression or follow `^' or
`|'.
`|' cannot appear first or last in a (sub)expression or after another
`|', i.e., an operand of `|' cannot be an empty subexpression. An empty
parenthesized subexpression, `()', is legal and matches an empty
(sub)string. An empty string is not a legal RE.
A `{' followed by a digit is considered the beginning of bounds for a
bounded repetition, which must then follow the syntax for bounds. A `{'
not followed by a digit is considered an ordinary character.
`^' and `$' beginning and ending subexpressions in obsolete ("basic") REs
are anchors, not ordinary characters.
RETURN VALUES
Non-zero error codes from regcomp() and regexec() include the following:
REG_NOMATCH The regexec() function failed to match
REG_BADPAT invalid regular expression
REG_ECOLLATE invalid collating element
REG_ECTYPE invalid character class
REG_EESCAPE `\' applied to unescapable character
REG_ESUBREG invalid backreference number
REG_EBRACK brackets `[ ]' not balanced
REG_EPAREN parentheses `( )' not balanced
REG_EBRACE braces `{ }' not balanced
REG_BADBR invalid repetition count(s) in `{ }'
REG_ERANGE invalid character range in `[ ]'
REG_ESPACE ran out of memory
REG_BADRPT `?', `*', or `+' operand invalid
REG_EMPTY empty (sub)expression
REG_ASSERT cannot happen - you found a bug
REG_INVARG invalid argument, e.g. negative-length string
REG_ILLSEQ illegal byte sequence (bad multibyte character)
SEE ALSO
grep(1), re_format(7)
IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2"), sections 2.8 (Regular Expression Notation)
and B.5 (C Binding for Regular Expression Matching).
HISTORY
The regex implementation is based on a heavily modified subset of TRE
(http://laurikari.net/tre/), originally written by Ville Laurikari.
Previous releases used an implementation originally written by Henry
Spencer, and altered for inclusion in the 4.4BSD distribution.
BUGS
The beginning-of-line and end-of-line anchors ( "^" and "$") are
currently implemented so that repetitions can not be applied to them.
The standards are unclear about whether this is legal, but other regex
packages do support this case. It is best to avoid this non-portable
(and not really very useful) case.
The back-reference code is subtle and doubts linger about its correctness
in complex cases.
The regexec() variants use one of two internal matching engines. The
normal one is linear worst-case time in the length of the text being
searched, and quadratic worst-case time in the length of the used regular
expression. When back-references are used, a slower, backtracking engine
is used. While all backtracking matching engines suffer from extreme
slowness for certain pathological cases, the normal engines doesn't
suffer from these cases. It is advised to avoid back-references whenever
possible.
The regcomp() variants implements bounded repetitions by macro expansion,
which is costly in time and space if counts are large or bounded
repetitions are nested. An RE like, say,
`((((a{1,100}){1,100}){1,100}){1,100}){1,100}' will (eventually) run
almost any existing machine out of swap space.
Due to a mistake in IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2"), things like `a)b' are
legal REs because `)' is a special character only in the presence of a
previous unmatched `('. This cannot be fixed until the spec is fixed.
The standard's definition of back references is vague. For example, does
`a\(\(b\)*\2\)*d' match `abbbd'? Until the standard is clarified,
behavior in such cases should not be relied on.
DragonFly 5.5-DEVELOPMENT May 5, 2019 DragonFly 5.5-DEVELOPMENT