| Index: third_party/re2/util/pcre.h
|
| diff --git a/third_party/re2/util/pcre.h b/third_party/re2/util/pcre.h
|
| new file mode 100644
|
| index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..771ac91a7e51439fc9be3c6861b10b67d67c74d7
|
| --- /dev/null
|
| +++ b/third_party/re2/util/pcre.h
|
| @@ -0,0 +1,685 @@
|
| +// Copyright 2003-2010 Google Inc. All Rights Reserved.
|
| +// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
|
| +// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
|
| +
|
| +// This is a variant of PCRE's pcrecpp.h, originally written at Google.
|
| +// The main changes are the addition of the HitLimit method and
|
| +// compilation as PCRE in namespace re2.
|
| +
|
| +// C++ interface to the pcre regular-expression library. PCRE supports
|
| +// Perl-style regular expressions (with extensions like \d, \w, \s,
|
| +// ...).
|
| +//
|
| +// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| +// REGEXP SYNTAX:
|
| +//
|
| +// This module uses the pcre library and hence supports its syntax
|
| +// for regular expressions:
|
| +//
|
| +// http://www.google.com/search?q=pcre
|
| +//
|
| +// The syntax is pretty similar to Perl's. For those not familiar
|
| +// with Perl's regular expressions, here are some examples of the most
|
| +// commonly used extensions:
|
| +//
|
| +// "hello (\\w+) world" -- \w matches a "word" character
|
| +// "version (\\d+)" -- \d matches a digit
|
| +// "hello\\s+world" -- \s matches any whitespace character
|
| +// "\\b(\\w+)\\b" -- \b matches empty string at a word boundary
|
| +// "(?i)hello" -- (?i) turns on case-insensitive matching
|
| +// "/\\*(.*?)\\*/" -- .*? matches . minimum no. of times possible
|
| +//
|
| +// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| +// MATCHING INTERFACE:
|
| +//
|
| +// The "FullMatch" operation checks that supplied text matches a
|
| +// supplied pattern exactly.
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: successful match
|
| +// CHECK(PCRE::FullMatch("hello", "h.*o"));
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: unsuccessful match (requires full match):
|
| +// CHECK(!PCRE::FullMatch("hello", "e"));
|
| +//
|
| +// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| +// UTF-8 AND THE MATCHING INTERFACE:
|
| +//
|
| +// By default, pattern and text are plain text, one byte per character.
|
| +// The UTF8 flag, passed to the constructor, causes both pattern
|
| +// and string to be treated as UTF-8 text, still a byte stream but
|
| +// potentially multiple bytes per character. In practice, the text
|
| +// is likelier to be UTF-8 than the pattern, but the match returned
|
| +// may depend on the UTF8 flag, so always use it when matching
|
| +// UTF8 text. E.g., "." will match one byte normally but with UTF8
|
| +// set may match up to three bytes of a multi-byte character.
|
| +//
|
| +// Example:
|
| +// PCRE re(utf8_pattern, PCRE::UTF8);
|
| +// CHECK(PCRE::FullMatch(utf8_string, re));
|
| +//
|
| +// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| +// MATCHING WITH SUB-STRING EXTRACTION:
|
| +//
|
| +// You can supply extra pointer arguments to extract matched subpieces.
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: extracts "ruby" into "s" and 1234 into "i"
|
| +// int i;
|
| +// string s;
|
| +// CHECK(PCRE::FullMatch("ruby:1234", "(\\w+):(\\d+)", &s, &i));
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: fails because string cannot be stored in integer
|
| +// CHECK(!PCRE::FullMatch("ruby", "(.*)", &i));
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: fails because there aren't enough sub-patterns:
|
| +// CHECK(!PCRE::FullMatch("ruby:1234", "\\w+:\\d+", &s));
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: does not try to extract any extra sub-patterns
|
| +// CHECK(PCRE::FullMatch("ruby:1234", "(\\w+):(\\d+)", &s));
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: does not try to extract into NULL
|
| +// CHECK(PCRE::FullMatch("ruby:1234", "(\\w+):(\\d+)", NULL, &i));
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: integer overflow causes failure
|
| +// CHECK(!PCRE::FullMatch("ruby:1234567891234", "\\w+:(\\d+)", &i));
|
| +//
|
| +// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| +// PARTIAL MATCHES
|
| +//
|
| +// You can use the "PartialMatch" operation when you want the pattern
|
| +// to match any substring of the text.
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: simple search for a string:
|
| +// CHECK(PCRE::PartialMatch("hello", "ell"));
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: find first number in a string
|
| +// int number;
|
| +// CHECK(PCRE::PartialMatch("x*100 + 20", "(\\d+)", &number));
|
| +// CHECK_EQ(number, 100);
|
| +//
|
| +// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| +// PPCRE-COMPILED PCREGULAR EXPPCRESSIONS
|
| +//
|
| +// PCRE makes it easy to use any string as a regular expression, without
|
| +// requiring a separate compilation step.
|
| +//
|
| +// If speed is of the essence, you can create a pre-compiled "PCRE"
|
| +// object from the pattern and use it multiple times. If you do so,
|
| +// you can typically parse text faster than with sscanf.
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: precompile pattern for faster matching:
|
| +// PCRE pattern("h.*o");
|
| +// while (ReadLine(&str)) {
|
| +// if (PCRE::FullMatch(str, pattern)) ...;
|
| +// }
|
| +//
|
| +// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| +// SCANNING TEXT INCPCREMENTALLY
|
| +//
|
| +// The "Consume" operation may be useful if you want to repeatedly
|
| +// match regular expressions at the front of a string and skip over
|
| +// them as they match. This requires use of the "StringPiece" type,
|
| +// which represents a sub-range of a real string.
|
| +//
|
| +// Example: read lines of the form "var = value" from a string.
|
| +// string contents = ...; // Fill string somehow
|
| +// StringPiece input(contents); // Wrap a StringPiece around it
|
| +//
|
| +// string var;
|
| +// int value;
|
| +// while (PCRE::Consume(&input, "(\\w+) = (\\d+)\n", &var, &value)) {
|
| +// ...;
|
| +// }
|
| +//
|
| +// Each successful call to "Consume" will set "var/value", and also
|
| +// advance "input" so it points past the matched text. Note that if the
|
| +// regular expression matches an empty string, input will advance
|
| +// by 0 bytes. If the regular expression being used might match
|
| +// an empty string, the loop body must check for this case and either
|
| +// advance the string or break out of the loop.
|
| +//
|
| +// The "FindAndConsume" operation is similar to "Consume" but does not
|
| +// anchor your match at the beginning of the string. For example, you
|
| +// could extract all words from a string by repeatedly calling
|
| +// PCRE::FindAndConsume(&input, "(\\w+)", &word)
|
| +//
|
| +// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| +// PARSING HEX/OCTAL/C-RADIX NUMBERS
|
| +//
|
| +// By default, if you pass a pointer to a numeric value, the
|
| +// corresponding text is interpreted as a base-10 number. You can
|
| +// instead wrap the pointer with a call to one of the operators Hex(),
|
| +// Octal(), or CRadix() to interpret the text in another base. The
|
| +// CRadix operator interprets C-style "0" (base-8) and "0x" (base-16)
|
| +// prefixes, but defaults to base-10.
|
| +//
|
| +// Example:
|
| +// int a, b, c, d;
|
| +// CHECK(PCRE::FullMatch("100 40 0100 0x40", "(.*) (.*) (.*) (.*)",
|
| +// Octal(&a), Hex(&b), CRadix(&c), CRadix(&d));
|
| +// will leave 64 in a, b, c, and d.
|
| +
|
| +#include "util/util.h"
|
| +#include "re2/stringpiece.h"
|
| +
|
| +#ifdef USEPCRE
|
| +#include <pcre.h>
|
| +namespace re2 {
|
| +const bool UsingPCRE = true;
|
| +} // namespace re2
|
| +#else
|
| +namespace re2 {
|
| +const bool UsingPCRE = false;
|
| +struct pcre;
|
| +struct pcre_extra { int flags, match_limit, match_limit_recursion; };
|
| +#define pcre_free(x) {}
|
| +#define PCRE_EXTRA_MATCH_LIMIT 0
|
| +#define PCRE_EXTRA_MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION 0
|
| +#define PCRE_ANCHORED 0
|
| +#define PCRE_NOTEMPTY 0
|
| +#define PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH 1
|
| +#define PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT 2
|
| +#define PCRE_ERROR_RECURSIONLIMIT 3
|
| +#define PCRE_INFO_CAPTURECOUNT 0
|
| +#ifndef WIN32
|
| +#define pcre_compile(a,b,c,d,e) ({ (void)(a); (void)(b); *(c)=""; *(d)=0; (void)(e); ((pcre*)0); })
|
| +#define pcre_exec(a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h) ({ (void)(a); (void)(b); (void)(c); (void)(d); (void)(e); (void)(f); (void)(g); (void)(h); 0; })
|
| +#define pcre_fullinfo(a, b, c, d) ({ (void)(a); (void)(b); (void)(c); *(d) = 0; 0; })
|
| +#else
|
| +#define pcre_compile(a,b,c,d,e) NULL
|
| +#define pcre_exec(a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h) NULL
|
| +#define pcre_fullinfo(a, b, c, d) NULL
|
| +#endif
|
| +} // namespace re2
|
| +#endif
|
| +
|
| +namespace re2 {
|
| +
|
| +class PCRE_Options;
|
| +
|
| +// Interface for regular expression matching. Also corresponds to a
|
| +// pre-compiled regular expression. An "PCRE" object is safe for
|
| +// concurrent use by multiple threads.
|
| +class PCRE {
|
| + public:
|
| + // We convert user-passed pointers into special Arg objects
|
| + class Arg;
|
| +
|
| + // Marks end of arg list.
|
| + // ONLY USE IN OPTIONAL ARG DEFAULTS.
|
| + // DO NOT PASS EXPLICITLY.
|
| + static Arg no_more_args;
|
| +
|
| + // Options are same value as those in pcre. We provide them here
|
| + // to avoid users needing to include pcre.h and also to isolate
|
| + // users from pcre should we change the underlying library.
|
| + // Only those needed by Google programs are exposed here to
|
| + // avoid collision with options employed internally by regexp.cc
|
| + // Note that some options have equivalents that can be specified in
|
| + // the regexp itself. For example, prefixing your regexp with
|
| + // "(?s)" has the same effect as the PCRE_DOTALL option.
|
| + enum Option {
|
| + None = 0x0000,
|
| + UTF8 = 0x0800, // == PCRE_UTF8
|
| + EnabledCompileOptions = UTF8,
|
| + EnabledExecOptions = 0x0000, // TODO: use to replace anchor flag
|
| + };
|
| +
|
| + // We provide implicit conversions from strings so that users can
|
| + // pass in a string or a "const char*" wherever an "PCRE" is expected.
|
| + PCRE(const char* pattern);
|
| + PCRE(const char* pattern, Option option);
|
| + PCRE(const string& pattern);
|
| + PCRE(const string& pattern, Option option);
|
| + PCRE(const char *pattern, const PCRE_Options& re_option);
|
| + PCRE(const string& pattern, const PCRE_Options& re_option);
|
| +
|
| + ~PCRE();
|
| +
|
| + // The string specification for this PCRE. E.g.
|
| + // PCRE re("ab*c?d+");
|
| + // re.pattern(); // "ab*c?d+"
|
| + const string& pattern() const { return pattern_; }
|
| +
|
| + // If PCRE could not be created properly, returns an error string.
|
| + // Else returns the empty string.
|
| + const string& error() const { return *error_; }
|
| +
|
| + // Whether the PCRE has hit a match limit during execution.
|
| + // Not thread safe. Intended only for testing.
|
| + // If hitting match limits is a problem,
|
| + // you should be using PCRE2 (re2/re2.h)
|
| + // instead of checking this flag.
|
| + bool HitLimit();
|
| + void ClearHitLimit();
|
| +
|
| + /***** The useful part: the matching interface *****/
|
| +
|
| + // Matches "text" against "pattern". If pointer arguments are
|
| + // supplied, copies matched sub-patterns into them.
|
| + //
|
| + // You can pass in a "const char*" or a "string" for "text".
|
| + // You can pass in a "const char*" or a "string" or a "PCRE" for "pattern".
|
| + //
|
| + // The provided pointer arguments can be pointers to any scalar numeric
|
| + // type, or one of:
|
| + // string (matched piece is copied to string)
|
| + // StringPiece (StringPiece is mutated to point to matched piece)
|
| + // T (where "bool T::ParseFrom(const char*, int)" exists)
|
| + // (void*)NULL (the corresponding matched sub-pattern is not copied)
|
| + //
|
| + // Returns true iff all of the following conditions are satisfied:
|
| + // a. "text" matches "pattern" exactly
|
| + // b. The number of matched sub-patterns is >= number of supplied pointers
|
| + // c. The "i"th argument has a suitable type for holding the
|
| + // string captured as the "i"th sub-pattern. If you pass in
|
| + // NULL for the "i"th argument, or pass fewer arguments than
|
| + // number of sub-patterns, "i"th captured sub-pattern is
|
| + // ignored.
|
| + //
|
| + // CAVEAT: An optional sub-pattern that does not exist in the
|
| + // matched string is assigned the empty string. Therefore, the
|
| + // following will return false (because the empty string is not a
|
| + // valid number):
|
| + // int number;
|
| + // PCRE::FullMatch("abc", "[a-z]+(\\d+)?", &number);
|
| + struct FullMatchFunctor {
|
| + bool operator ()(const StringPiece& text, const PCRE& re, // 3..16 args
|
| + const Arg& ptr1 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr2 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr3 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr4 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr5 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr6 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr7 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr8 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr9 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr10 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr11 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr12 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr13 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr14 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr15 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr16 = no_more_args) const;
|
| + };
|
| +
|
| + static const FullMatchFunctor FullMatch;
|
| +
|
| + // Exactly like FullMatch(), except that "pattern" is allowed to match
|
| + // a substring of "text".
|
| + struct PartialMatchFunctor {
|
| + bool operator ()(const StringPiece& text, const PCRE& re, // 3..16 args
|
| + const Arg& ptr1 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr2 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr3 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr4 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr5 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr6 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr7 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr8 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr9 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr10 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr11 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr12 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr13 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr14 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr15 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr16 = no_more_args) const;
|
| + };
|
| +
|
| + static const PartialMatchFunctor PartialMatch;
|
| +
|
| + // Like FullMatch() and PartialMatch(), except that pattern has to
|
| + // match a prefix of "text", and "input" is advanced past the matched
|
| + // text. Note: "input" is modified iff this routine returns true.
|
| + struct ConsumeFunctor {
|
| + bool operator ()(StringPiece* input, const PCRE& pattern, // 3..16 args
|
| + const Arg& ptr1 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr2 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr3 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr4 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr5 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr6 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr7 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr8 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr9 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr10 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr11 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr12 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr13 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr14 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr15 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr16 = no_more_args) const;
|
| + };
|
| +
|
| + static const ConsumeFunctor Consume;
|
| +
|
| + // Like Consume(..), but does not anchor the match at the beginning of the
|
| + // string. That is, "pattern" need not start its match at the beginning of
|
| + // "input". For example, "FindAndConsume(s, "(\\w+)", &word)" finds the next
|
| + // word in "s" and stores it in "word".
|
| + struct FindAndConsumeFunctor {
|
| + bool operator ()(StringPiece* input, const PCRE& pattern,
|
| + const Arg& ptr1 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr2 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr3 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr4 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr5 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr6 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr7 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr8 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr9 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr10 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr11 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr12 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr13 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr14 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr15 = no_more_args,
|
| + const Arg& ptr16 = no_more_args) const;
|
| + };
|
| +
|
| + static const FindAndConsumeFunctor FindAndConsume;
|
| +
|
| + // Replace the first match of "pattern" in "str" with "rewrite".
|
| + // Within "rewrite", backslash-escaped digits (\1 to \9) can be
|
| + // used to insert text matching corresponding parenthesized group
|
| + // from the pattern. \0 in "rewrite" refers to the entire matching
|
| + // text. E.g.,
|
| + //
|
| + // string s = "yabba dabba doo";
|
| + // CHECK(PCRE::Replace(&s, "b+", "d"));
|
| + //
|
| + // will leave "s" containing "yada dabba doo"
|
| + //
|
| + // Returns true if the pattern matches and a replacement occurs,
|
| + // false otherwise.
|
| + static bool Replace(string *str,
|
| + const PCRE& pattern,
|
| + const StringPiece& rewrite);
|
| +
|
| + // Like Replace(), except replaces all occurrences of the pattern in
|
| + // the string with the rewrite. Replacements are not subject to
|
| + // re-matching. E.g.,
|
| + //
|
| + // string s = "yabba dabba doo";
|
| + // CHECK(PCRE::GlobalReplace(&s, "b+", "d"));
|
| + //
|
| + // will leave "s" containing "yada dada doo"
|
| + //
|
| + // Returns the number of replacements made.
|
| + static int GlobalReplace(string *str,
|
| + const PCRE& pattern,
|
| + const StringPiece& rewrite);
|
| +
|
| + // Like Replace, except that if the pattern matches, "rewrite"
|
| + // is copied into "out" with substitutions. The non-matching
|
| + // portions of "text" are ignored.
|
| + //
|
| + // Returns true iff a match occurred and the extraction happened
|
| + // successfully; if no match occurs, the string is left unaffected.
|
| + static bool Extract(const StringPiece &text,
|
| + const PCRE& pattern,
|
| + const StringPiece &rewrite,
|
| + string *out);
|
| +
|
| + // Check that the given @p rewrite string is suitable for use with
|
| + // this PCRE. It checks that:
|
| + // * The PCRE has enough parenthesized subexpressions to satisfy all
|
| + // of the \N tokens in @p rewrite, and
|
| + // * The @p rewrite string doesn't have any syntax errors
|
| + // ('\' followed by anything besides [0-9] and '\').
|
| + // Making this test will guarantee that "replace" and "extract"
|
| + // operations won't LOG(ERROR) or fail because of a bad rewrite
|
| + // string.
|
| + // @param rewrite The proposed rewrite string.
|
| + // @param error An error message is recorded here, iff we return false.
|
| + // Otherwise, it is unchanged.
|
| + // @return true, iff @p rewrite is suitable for use with the PCRE.
|
| + bool CheckRewriteString(const StringPiece& rewrite, string* error) const;
|
| +
|
| + // Returns a copy of 'unquoted' with all potentially meaningful
|
| + // regexp characters backslash-escaped. The returned string, used
|
| + // as a regular expression, will exactly match the original string.
|
| + // For example,
|
| + // 1.5-2.0?
|
| + // becomes:
|
| + // 1\.5\-2\.0\?
|
| + static string QuoteMeta(const StringPiece& unquoted);
|
| +
|
| + /***** Generic matching interface (not so nice to use) *****/
|
| +
|
| + // Type of match (TODO: Should be restructured as an Option)
|
| + enum Anchor {
|
| + UNANCHORED, // No anchoring
|
| + ANCHOR_START, // Anchor at start only
|
| + ANCHOR_BOTH, // Anchor at start and end
|
| + };
|
| +
|
| + // General matching routine. Stores the length of the match in
|
| + // "*consumed" if successful.
|
| + bool DoMatch(const StringPiece& text,
|
| + Anchor anchor,
|
| + int* consumed,
|
| + const Arg* const* args, int n) const;
|
| +
|
| + // Return the number of capturing subpatterns, or -1 if the
|
| + // regexp wasn't valid on construction.
|
| + int NumberOfCapturingGroups() const;
|
| +
|
| + private:
|
| + void Init(const char* pattern, Option option, int match_limit,
|
| + int stack_limit, bool report_errors);
|
| +
|
| + // Match against "text", filling in "vec" (up to "vecsize" * 2/3) with
|
| + // pairs of integers for the beginning and end positions of matched
|
| + // text. The first pair corresponds to the entire matched text;
|
| + // subsequent pairs correspond, in order, to parentheses-captured
|
| + // matches. Returns the number of pairs (one more than the number of
|
| + // the last subpattern with a match) if matching was successful
|
| + // and zero if the match failed.
|
| + // I.e. for PCRE("(foo)|(bar)|(baz)") it will return 2, 3, and 4 when matching
|
| + // against "foo", "bar", and "baz" respectively.
|
| + // When matching PCRE("(foo)|hello") against "hello", it will return 1.
|
| + // But the values for all subpattern are filled in into "vec".
|
| + int TryMatch(const StringPiece& text,
|
| + int startpos,
|
| + Anchor anchor,
|
| + bool empty_ok,
|
| + int *vec,
|
| + int vecsize) const;
|
| +
|
| + // Append the "rewrite" string, with backslash subsitutions from "text"
|
| + // and "vec", to string "out".
|
| + bool Rewrite(string *out,
|
| + const StringPiece &rewrite,
|
| + const StringPiece &text,
|
| + int *vec,
|
| + int veclen) const;
|
| +
|
| + // internal implementation for DoMatch
|
| + bool DoMatchImpl(const StringPiece& text,
|
| + Anchor anchor,
|
| + int* consumed,
|
| + const Arg* const args[],
|
| + int n,
|
| + int* vec,
|
| + int vecsize) const;
|
| +
|
| + // Compile the regexp for the specified anchoring mode
|
| + pcre* Compile(Anchor anchor);
|
| +
|
| + string pattern_;
|
| + Option options_;
|
| + pcre* re_full_; // For full matches
|
| + pcre* re_partial_; // For partial matches
|
| + const string* error_; // Error indicator (or empty string)
|
| + bool report_errors_; // Silences error logging if false
|
| + int match_limit_; // Limit on execution resources
|
| + int stack_limit_; // Limit on stack resources (bytes)
|
| + mutable int32_t hit_limit_; // Hit limit during execution (bool)?
|
| + DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(PCRE);
|
| +};
|
| +
|
| +// PCRE_Options allow you to set the PCRE::Options, plus any pcre
|
| +// "extra" options. The only extras are match_limit, which limits
|
| +// the CPU time of a match, and stack_limit, which limits the
|
| +// stack usage. Setting a limit to <= 0 lets PCRE pick a sensible default
|
| +// that should not cause too many problems in production code.
|
| +// If PCRE hits a limit during a match, it may return a false negative,
|
| +// but (hopefully) it won't crash.
|
| +//
|
| +// NOTE: If you are handling regular expressions specified by
|
| +// (external or internal) users, rather than hard-coded ones,
|
| +// you should be using PCRE2, which uses an alternate implementation
|
| +// that avoids these issues. See http://go/re2quick.
|
| +class PCRE_Options {
|
| + public:
|
| + // constructor
|
| + PCRE_Options() : option_(PCRE::None), match_limit_(0), stack_limit_(0), report_errors_(true) {}
|
| + // accessors
|
| + PCRE::Option option() const { return option_; }
|
| + void set_option(PCRE::Option option) {
|
| + option_ = option;
|
| + }
|
| + int match_limit() const { return match_limit_; }
|
| + void set_match_limit(int match_limit) {
|
| + match_limit_ = match_limit;
|
| + }
|
| + int stack_limit() const { return stack_limit_; }
|
| + void set_stack_limit(int stack_limit) {
|
| + stack_limit_ = stack_limit;
|
| + }
|
| +
|
| + // If the regular expression is malformed, an error message will be printed
|
| + // iff report_errors() is true. Default: true.
|
| + bool report_errors() const { return report_errors_; }
|
| + void set_report_errors(bool report_errors) {
|
| + report_errors_ = report_errors;
|
| + }
|
| + private:
|
| + PCRE::Option option_;
|
| + int match_limit_;
|
| + int stack_limit_;
|
| + bool report_errors_;
|
| +};
|
| +
|
| +
|
| +/***** Implementation details *****/
|
| +
|
| +// Hex/Octal/Binary?
|
| +
|
| +// Special class for parsing into objects that define a ParseFrom() method
|
| +template <class T>
|
| +class _PCRE_MatchObject {
|
| + public:
|
| + static inline bool Parse(const char* str, int n, void* dest) {
|
| + if (dest == NULL) return true;
|
| + T* object = reinterpret_cast<T*>(dest);
|
| + return object->ParseFrom(str, n);
|
| + }
|
| +};
|
| +
|
| +class PCRE::Arg {
|
| + public:
|
| + // Empty constructor so we can declare arrays of PCRE::Arg
|
| + Arg();
|
| +
|
| + // Constructor specially designed for NULL arguments
|
| + Arg(void*);
|
| +
|
| + typedef bool (*Parser)(const char* str, int n, void* dest);
|
| +
|
| +// Type-specific parsers
|
| +#define MAKE_PARSER(type,name) \
|
| + Arg(type* p) : arg_(p), parser_(name) { } \
|
| + Arg(type* p, Parser parser) : arg_(p), parser_(parser) { } \
|
| +
|
| +
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(char, parse_char);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(unsigned char, parse_uchar);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(short, parse_short);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(unsigned short, parse_ushort);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(int, parse_int);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(unsigned int, parse_uint);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(long, parse_long);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(unsigned long, parse_ulong);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(long long, parse_longlong);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(unsigned long long, parse_ulonglong);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(float, parse_float);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(double, parse_double);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(string, parse_string);
|
| + MAKE_PARSER(StringPiece, parse_stringpiece);
|
| +
|
| +#undef MAKE_PARSER
|
| +
|
| + // Generic constructor
|
| + template <class T> Arg(T*, Parser parser);
|
| + // Generic constructor template
|
| + template <class T> Arg(T* p)
|
| + : arg_(p), parser_(_PCRE_MatchObject<T>::Parse) {
|
| + }
|
| +
|
| + // Parse the data
|
| + bool Parse(const char* str, int n) const;
|
| +
|
| + private:
|
| + void* arg_;
|
| + Parser parser_;
|
| +
|
| + static bool parse_null (const char* str, int n, void* dest);
|
| + static bool parse_char (const char* str, int n, void* dest);
|
| + static bool parse_uchar (const char* str, int n, void* dest);
|
| + static bool parse_float (const char* str, int n, void* dest);
|
| + static bool parse_double (const char* str, int n, void* dest);
|
| + static bool parse_string (const char* str, int n, void* dest);
|
| + static bool parse_stringpiece (const char* str, int n, void* dest);
|
| +
|
| +#define DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(name) \
|
| + private: \
|
| + static bool parse_ ## name(const char* str, int n, void* dest); \
|
| + static bool parse_ ## name ## _radix( \
|
| + const char* str, int n, void* dest, int radix); \
|
| + public: \
|
| + static bool parse_ ## name ## _hex(const char* str, int n, void* dest); \
|
| + static bool parse_ ## name ## _octal(const char* str, int n, void* dest); \
|
| + static bool parse_ ## name ## _cradix(const char* str, int n, void* dest)
|
| +
|
| + DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(short);
|
| + DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(ushort);
|
| + DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(int);
|
| + DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(uint);
|
| + DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(long);
|
| + DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(ulong);
|
| + DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(longlong);
|
| + DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER(ulonglong);
|
| +
|
| +#undef DECLARE_INTEGER_PARSER
|
| +};
|
| +
|
| +inline PCRE::Arg::Arg() : arg_(NULL), parser_(parse_null) { }
|
| +inline PCRE::Arg::Arg(void* p) : arg_(p), parser_(parse_null) { }
|
| +
|
| +inline bool PCRE::Arg::Parse(const char* str, int n) const {
|
| + return (*parser_)(str, n, arg_);
|
| +}
|
| +
|
| +// This part of the parser, appropriate only for ints, deals with bases
|
| +#define MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(type, name) \
|
| + inline PCRE::Arg Hex(type* ptr) { \
|
| + return PCRE::Arg(ptr, PCRE::Arg::parse_ ## name ## _hex); } \
|
| + inline PCRE::Arg Octal(type* ptr) { \
|
| + return PCRE::Arg(ptr, PCRE::Arg::parse_ ## name ## _octal); } \
|
| + inline PCRE::Arg CRadix(type* ptr) { \
|
| + return PCRE::Arg(ptr, PCRE::Arg::parse_ ## name ## _cradix); }
|
| +
|
| +MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(short, short);
|
| +MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(unsigned short, ushort);
|
| +MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(int, int);
|
| +MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(unsigned int, uint);
|
| +MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(long, long);
|
| +MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(unsigned long, ulong);
|
| +MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(long long, longlong);
|
| +MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER(unsigned long long, ulonglong);
|
| +
|
| +#undef MAKE_INTEGER_PARSER
|
| +
|
| +} // namespace re2
|
|
|