1README file for PCRE2 (Perl-compatible regular expression library) 2------------------------------------------------------------------ 3 4PCRE2 is a re-working of the original PCRE1 library to provide an entirely new 5API. Since its initial release in 2015, there has been further development of 6the code and it now differs from PCRE1 in more than just the API. There are new 7features, and the internals have been improved. The original PCRE1 library is 8now obsolete and no longer maintained. The latest release of PCRE2 is available 9in .tar.gz, tar.bz2, or .zip form from this GitHub repository: 10 11https://github.com/PhilipHazel/pcre2/releases 12 13There is a mailing list for discussion about the development of PCRE2 at 14pcre2-dev@googlegroups.com. You can subscribe by sending an email to 15pcre2-dev+subscribe@googlegroups.com. 16 17You can access the archives and also subscribe or manage your subscription 18here: 19 20https://groups.google.com/pcre2-dev 21 22Please read the NEWS file if you are upgrading from a previous release. The 23contents of this README file are: 24 25 The PCRE2 APIs 26 Documentation for PCRE2 27 Contributions by users of PCRE2 28 Building PCRE2 on non-Unix-like systems 29 Building PCRE2 without using autotools 30 Building PCRE2 using autotools 31 Retrieving configuration information 32 Shared libraries 33 Cross-compiling using autotools 34 Making new tarballs 35 Testing PCRE2 36 Character tables 37 File manifest 38 39 40The PCRE2 APIs 41-------------- 42 43PCRE2 is written in C, and it has its own API. There are three sets of 44functions, one for the 8-bit library, which processes strings of bytes, one for 45the 16-bit library, which processes strings of 16-bit values, and one for the 4632-bit library, which processes strings of 32-bit values. Unlike PCRE1, there 47are no C++ wrappers. 48 49The distribution does contain a set of C wrapper functions for the 8-bit 50library that are based on the POSIX regular expression API (see the pcre2posix 51man page). These are built into a library called libpcre2-posix. Note that this 52just provides a POSIX calling interface to PCRE2; the regular expressions 53themselves still follow Perl syntax and semantics. The POSIX API is restricted, 54and does not give full access to all of PCRE2's facilities. 55 56The header file for the POSIX-style functions is called pcre2posix.h. The 57official POSIX name is regex.h, but I did not want to risk possible problems 58with existing files of that name by distributing it that way. To use PCRE2 with 59an existing program that uses the POSIX API, pcre2posix.h will have to be 60renamed or pointed at by a link (or the program modified, of course). See the 61pcre2posix documentation for more details. 62 63 64Documentation for PCRE2 65----------------------- 66 67If you install PCRE2 in the normal way on a Unix-like system, you will end up 68with a set of man pages whose names all start with "pcre2". The one that is 69just called "pcre2" lists all the others. In addition to these man pages, the 70PCRE2 documentation is supplied in two other forms: 71 72 1. There are files called doc/pcre2.txt, doc/pcre2grep.txt, and 73 doc/pcre2test.txt in the source distribution. The first of these is a 74 concatenation of the text forms of all the section 3 man pages except the 75 listing of pcre2demo.c and those that summarize individual functions. The 76 other two are the text forms of the section 1 man pages for the pcre2grep 77 and pcre2test commands. These text forms are provided for ease of scanning 78 with text editors or similar tools. They are installed in 79 <prefix>/share/doc/pcre2, where <prefix> is the installation prefix 80 (defaulting to /usr/local). 81 82 2. A set of files containing all the documentation in HTML form, hyperlinked 83 in various ways, and rooted in a file called index.html, is distributed in 84 doc/html and installed in <prefix>/share/doc/pcre2/html. 85 86 87Building PCRE2 on non-Unix-like systems 88--------------------------------------- 89 90For a non-Unix-like system, please read the file NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD, though if 91your system supports the use of "configure" and "make" you may be able to build 92PCRE2 using autotools in the same way as for many Unix-like systems. 93 94PCRE2 can also be configured using CMake, which can be run in various ways 95(command line, GUI, etc). This creates Makefiles, solution files, etc. The file 96NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD has information about CMake. 97 98PCRE2 has been compiled on many different operating systems. It should be 99straightforward to build PCRE2 on any system that has a Standard C compiler and 100library, because it uses only Standard C functions. 101 102 103Building PCRE2 without using autotools 104-------------------------------------- 105 106The use of autotools (in particular, libtool) is problematic in some 107environments, even some that are Unix or Unix-like. See the NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD 108file for ways of building PCRE2 without using autotools. 109 110 111Building PCRE2 using autotools 112------------------------------ 113 114The following instructions assume the use of the widely used "configure; make; 115make install" (autotools) process. 116 117To build PCRE2 on system that supports autotools, first run the "configure" 118command from the PCRE2 distribution directory, with your current directory set 119to the directory where you want the files to be created. This command is a 120standard GNU "autoconf" configuration script, for which generic instructions 121are supplied in the file INSTALL. 122 123Most commonly, people build PCRE2 within its own distribution directory, and in 124this case, on many systems, just running "./configure" is sufficient. However, 125the usual methods of changing standard defaults are available. For example: 126 127CFLAGS='-O2 -Wall' ./configure --prefix=/opt/local 128 129This command specifies that the C compiler should be run with the flags '-O2 130-Wall' instead of the default, and that "make install" should install PCRE2 131under /opt/local instead of the default /usr/local. 132 133If you want to build in a different directory, just run "configure" with that 134directory as current. For example, suppose you have unpacked the PCRE2 source 135into /source/pcre2/pcre2-xxx, but you want to build it in 136/build/pcre2/pcre2-xxx: 137 138cd /build/pcre2/pcre2-xxx 139/source/pcre2/pcre2-xxx/configure 140 141PCRE2 is written in C and is normally compiled as a C library. However, it is 142possible to build it as a C++ library, though the provided building apparatus 143does not have any features to support this. 144 145There are some optional features that can be included or omitted from the PCRE2 146library. They are also documented in the pcre2build man page. 147 148. By default, both shared and static libraries are built. You can change this 149 by adding one of these options to the "configure" command: 150 151 --disable-shared 152 --disable-static 153 154 (See also "Shared libraries on Unix-like systems" below.) 155 156. By default, only the 8-bit library is built. If you add --enable-pcre2-16 to 157 the "configure" command, the 16-bit library is also built. If you add 158 --enable-pcre2-32 to the "configure" command, the 32-bit library is also 159 built. If you want only the 16-bit or 32-bit library, use --disable-pcre2-8 160 to disable building the 8-bit library. 161 162. If you want to include support for just-in-time (JIT) compiling, which can 163 give large performance improvements on certain platforms, add --enable-jit to 164 the "configure" command. This support is available only for certain hardware 165 architectures. If you try to enable it on an unsupported architecture, there 166 will be a compile time error. If in doubt, use --enable-jit=auto, which 167 enables JIT only if the current hardware is supported. 168 169. If you are enabling JIT under SELinux environment you may also want to add 170 --enable-jit-sealloc, which enables the use of an executable memory allocator 171 that is compatible with SELinux. Warning: this allocator is experimental! 172 It does not support fork() operation and may crash when no disk space is 173 available. This option has no effect if JIT is disabled. 174 175. If you do not want to make use of the default support for UTF-8 Unicode 176 character strings in the 8-bit library, UTF-16 Unicode character strings in 177 the 16-bit library, or UTF-32 Unicode character strings in the 32-bit 178 library, you can add --disable-unicode to the "configure" command. This 179 reduces the size of the libraries. It is not possible to configure one 180 library with Unicode support, and another without, in the same configuration. 181 It is also not possible to use --enable-ebcdic (see below) with Unicode 182 support, so if this option is set, you must also use --disable-unicode. 183 184 When Unicode support is available, the use of a UTF encoding still has to be 185 enabled by setting the PCRE2_UTF option at run time or starting a pattern 186 with (*UTF). When PCRE2 is compiled with Unicode support, its input can only 187 either be ASCII or UTF-8/16/32, even when running on EBCDIC platforms. 188 189 As well as supporting UTF strings, Unicode support includes support for the 190 \P, \p, and \X sequences that recognize Unicode character properties. 191 However, only the basic two-letter properties such as Lu are supported. 192 Escape sequences such as \d and \w in patterns do not by default make use of 193 Unicode properties, but can be made to do so by setting the PCRE2_UCP option 194 or starting a pattern with (*UCP). 195 196. You can build PCRE2 to recognize either CR or LF or the sequence CRLF, or any 197 of the preceding, or any of the Unicode newline sequences, or the NUL (zero) 198 character as indicating the end of a line. Whatever you specify at build time 199 is the default; the caller of PCRE2 can change the selection at run time. The 200 default newline indicator is a single LF character (the Unix standard). You 201 can specify the default newline indicator by adding --enable-newline-is-cr, 202 --enable-newline-is-lf, --enable-newline-is-crlf, 203 --enable-newline-is-anycrlf, --enable-newline-is-any, or 204 --enable-newline-is-nul to the "configure" command, respectively. 205 206. By default, the sequence \R in a pattern matches any Unicode line ending 207 sequence. This is independent of the option specifying what PCRE2 considers 208 to be the end of a line (see above). However, the caller of PCRE2 can 209 restrict \R to match only CR, LF, or CRLF. You can make this the default by 210 adding --enable-bsr-anycrlf to the "configure" command (bsr = "backslash R"). 211 212. In a pattern, the escape sequence \C matches a single code unit, even in a 213 UTF mode. This can be dangerous because it breaks up multi-code-unit 214 characters. You can build PCRE2 with the use of \C permanently locked out by 215 adding --enable-never-backslash-C (note the upper case C) to the "configure" 216 command. When \C is allowed by the library, individual applications can lock 217 it out by calling pcre2_compile() with the PCRE2_NEVER_BACKSLASH_C option. 218 219. PCRE2 has a counter that limits the depth of nesting of parentheses in a 220 pattern. This limits the amount of system stack that a pattern uses when it 221 is compiled. The default is 250, but you can change it by setting, for 222 example, 223 224 --with-parens-nest-limit=500 225 226. PCRE2 has a counter that can be set to limit the amount of computing resource 227 it uses when matching a pattern. If the limit is exceeded during a match, the 228 match fails. The default is ten million. You can change the default by 229 setting, for example, 230 231 --with-match-limit=500000 232 233 on the "configure" command. This is just the default; individual calls to 234 pcre2_match() or pcre2_dfa_match() can supply their own value. There is more 235 discussion in the pcre2api man page (search for pcre2_set_match_limit). 236 237. There is a separate counter that limits the depth of nested backtracking 238 (pcre2_match()) or nested function calls (pcre2_dfa_match()) during a 239 matching process, which indirectly limits the amount of heap memory that is 240 used, and in the case of pcre2_dfa_match() the amount of stack as well. This 241 counter also has a default of ten million, which is essentially "unlimited". 242 You can change the default by setting, for example, 243 244 --with-match-limit-depth=5000 245 246 There is more discussion in the pcre2api man page (search for 247 pcre2_set_depth_limit). 248 249. You can also set an explicit limit on the amount of heap memory used by 250 the pcre2_match() and pcre2_dfa_match() interpreters: 251 252 --with-heap-limit=500 253 254 The units are kibibytes (units of 1024 bytes). This limit does not apply when 255 the JIT optimization (which has its own memory control features) is used. 256 There is more discussion on the pcre2api man page (search for 257 pcre2_set_heap_limit). 258 259. In the 8-bit library, the default maximum compiled pattern size is around 260 64 kibibytes. You can increase this by adding --with-link-size=3 to the 261 "configure" command. PCRE2 then uses three bytes instead of two for offsets 262 to different parts of the compiled pattern. In the 16-bit library, 263 --with-link-size=3 is the same as --with-link-size=4, which (in both 264 libraries) uses four-byte offsets. Increasing the internal link size reduces 265 performance in the 8-bit and 16-bit libraries. In the 32-bit library, the 266 link size setting is ignored, as 4-byte offsets are always used. 267 268. For speed, PCRE2 uses four tables for manipulating and identifying characters 269 whose code point values are less than 256. By default, it uses a set of 270 tables for ASCII encoding that is part of the distribution. If you specify 271 272 --enable-rebuild-chartables 273 274 a program called pcre2_dftables is compiled and run in the default C locale 275 when you obey "make". It builds a source file called pcre2_chartables.c. If 276 you do not specify this option, pcre2_chartables.c is created as a copy of 277 pcre2_chartables.c.dist. See "Character tables" below for further 278 information. 279 280. It is possible to compile PCRE2 for use on systems that use EBCDIC as their 281 character code (as opposed to ASCII/Unicode) by specifying 282 283 --enable-ebcdic --disable-unicode 284 285 This automatically implies --enable-rebuild-chartables (see above). However, 286 when PCRE2 is built this way, it always operates in EBCDIC. It cannot support 287 both EBCDIC and UTF-8/16/32. There is a second option, --enable-ebcdic-nl25, 288 which specifies that the code value for the EBCDIC NL character is 0x25 289 instead of the default 0x15. 290 291. If you specify --enable-debug, additional debugging code is included in the 292 build. This option is intended for use by the PCRE2 maintainers. 293 294. In environments where valgrind is installed, if you specify 295 296 --enable-valgrind 297 298 PCRE2 will use valgrind annotations to mark certain memory regions as 299 unaddressable. This allows it to detect invalid memory accesses, and is 300 mostly useful for debugging PCRE2 itself. 301 302. In environments where the gcc compiler is used and lcov is installed, if you 303 specify 304 305 --enable-coverage 306 307 the build process implements a code coverage report for the test suite. The 308 report is generated by running "make coverage". If ccache is installed on 309 your system, it must be disabled when building PCRE2 for coverage reporting. 310 You can do this by setting the environment variable CCACHE_DISABLE=1 before 311 running "make" to build PCRE2. There is more information about coverage 312 reporting in the "pcre2build" documentation. 313 314. When JIT support is enabled, pcre2grep automatically makes use of it, unless 315 you add --disable-pcre2grep-jit to the "configure" command. 316 317. There is support for calling external programs during matching in the 318 pcre2grep command, using PCRE2's callout facility with string arguments. This 319 support can be disabled by adding --disable-pcre2grep-callout to the 320 "configure" command. There are two kinds of callout: one that generates 321 output from inbuilt code, and another that calls an external program. The 322 latter has special support for Windows and VMS; otherwise it assumes the 323 existence of the fork() function. This facility can be disabled by adding 324 --disable-pcre2grep-callout-fork to the "configure" command. 325 326. The pcre2grep program currently supports only 8-bit data files, and so 327 requires the 8-bit PCRE2 library. It is possible to compile pcre2grep to use 328 libz and/or libbz2, in order to read .gz and .bz2 files (respectively), by 329 specifying one or both of 330 331 --enable-pcre2grep-libz 332 --enable-pcre2grep-libbz2 333 334 Of course, the relevant libraries must be installed on your system. 335 336. The default starting size (in bytes) of the internal buffer used by pcre2grep 337 can be set by, for example: 338 339 --with-pcre2grep-bufsize=51200 340 341 The value must be a plain integer. The default is 20480. The amount of memory 342 used by pcre2grep is actually three times this number, to allow for "before" 343 and "after" lines. If very long lines are encountered, the buffer is 344 automatically enlarged, up to a fixed maximum size. 345 346. The default maximum size of pcre2grep's internal buffer can be set by, for 347 example: 348 349 --with-pcre2grep-max-bufsize=2097152 350 351 The default is either 1048576 or the value of --with-pcre2grep-bufsize, 352 whichever is the larger. 353 354. It is possible to compile pcre2test so that it links with the libreadline 355 or libedit libraries, by specifying, respectively, 356 357 --enable-pcre2test-libreadline or --enable-pcre2test-libedit 358 359 If this is done, when pcre2test's input is from a terminal, it reads it using 360 the readline() function. This provides line-editing and history facilities. 361 Note that libreadline is GPL-licenced, so if you distribute a binary of 362 pcre2test linked in this way, there may be licensing issues. These can be 363 avoided by linking with libedit (which has a BSD licence) instead. 364 365 Enabling libreadline causes the -lreadline option to be added to the 366 pcre2test build. In many operating environments with a sytem-installed 367 readline library this is sufficient. However, in some environments (e.g. if 368 an unmodified distribution version of readline is in use), it may be 369 necessary to specify something like LIBS="-lncurses" as well. This is 370 because, to quote the readline INSTALL, "Readline uses the termcap functions, 371 but does not link with the termcap or curses library itself, allowing 372 applications which link with readline the to choose an appropriate library." 373 If you get error messages about missing functions tgetstr, tgetent, tputs, 374 tgetflag, or tgoto, this is the problem, and linking with the ncurses library 375 should fix it. 376 377. The C99 standard defines formatting modifiers z and t for size_t and 378 ptrdiff_t values, respectively. By default, PCRE2 uses these modifiers in 379 environments other than Microsoft Visual Studio versions earlier than 2013 380 when __STDC_VERSION__ is defined and has a value greater than or equal to 381 199901L (indicating C99). However, there is at least one environment that 382 claims to be C99 but does not support these modifiers. If 383 --disable-percent-zt is specified, no use is made of the z or t modifiers. 384 Instead of %td or %zu, %lu is used, with a cast for size_t values. 385 386. There is a special option called --enable-fuzz-support for use by people who 387 want to run fuzzing tests on PCRE2. At present this applies only to the 8-bit 388 library. If set, it causes an extra library called libpcre2-fuzzsupport.a to 389 be built, but not installed. This contains a single function called 390 LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput() whose arguments are a pointer to a string and the 391 length of the string. When called, this function tries to compile the string 392 as a pattern, and if that succeeds, to match it. This is done both with no 393 options and with some random options bits that are generated from the string. 394 Setting --enable-fuzz-support also causes a binary called pcre2fuzzcheck to 395 be created. This is normally run under valgrind or used when PCRE2 is 396 compiled with address sanitizing enabled. It calls the fuzzing function and 397 outputs information about it is doing. The input strings are specified by 398 arguments: if an argument starts with "=" the rest of it is a literal input 399 string. Otherwise, it is assumed to be a file name, and the contents of the 400 file are the test string. 401 402. Releases before 10.30 could be compiled with --disable-stack-for-recursion, 403 which caused pcre2_match() to use individual blocks on the heap for 404 backtracking instead of recursive function calls (which use the stack). This 405 is now obsolete since pcre2_match() was refactored always to use the heap (in 406 a much more efficient way than before). This option is retained for backwards 407 compatibility, but has no effect other than to output a warning. 408 409The "configure" script builds the following files for the basic C library: 410 411. Makefile the makefile that builds the library 412. src/config.h build-time configuration options for the library 413. src/pcre2.h the public PCRE2 header file 414. pcre2-config script that shows the building settings such as CFLAGS 415 that were set for "configure" 416. libpcre2-8.pc ) 417. libpcre2-16.pc ) data for the pkg-config command 418. libpcre2-32.pc ) 419. libpcre2-posix.pc ) 420. libtool script that builds shared and/or static libraries 421 422Versions of config.h and pcre2.h are distributed in the src directory of PCRE2 423tarballs under the names config.h.generic and pcre2.h.generic. These are 424provided for those who have to build PCRE2 without using "configure" or CMake. 425If you use "configure" or CMake, the .generic versions are not used. 426 427The "configure" script also creates config.status, which is an executable 428script that can be run to recreate the configuration, and config.log, which 429contains compiler output from tests that "configure" runs. 430 431Once "configure" has run, you can run "make". This builds whichever of the 432libraries libpcre2-8, libpcre2-16 and libpcre2-32 are configured, and a test 433program called pcre2test. If you enabled JIT support with --enable-jit, another 434test program called pcre2_jit_test is built as well. If the 8-bit library is 435built, libpcre2-posix and the pcre2grep command are also built. Running 436"make" with the -j option may speed up compilation on multiprocessor systems. 437 438The command "make check" runs all the appropriate tests. Details of the PCRE2 439tests are given below in a separate section of this document. The -j option of 440"make" can also be used when running the tests. 441 442You can use "make install" to install PCRE2 into live directories on your 443system. The following are installed (file names are all relative to the 444<prefix> that is set when "configure" is run): 445 446 Commands (bin): 447 pcre2test 448 pcre2grep (if 8-bit support is enabled) 449 pcre2-config 450 451 Libraries (lib): 452 libpcre2-8 (if 8-bit support is enabled) 453 libpcre2-16 (if 16-bit support is enabled) 454 libpcre2-32 (if 32-bit support is enabled) 455 libpcre2-posix (if 8-bit support is enabled) 456 457 Configuration information (lib/pkgconfig): 458 libpcre2-8.pc 459 libpcre2-16.pc 460 libpcre2-32.pc 461 libpcre2-posix.pc 462 463 Header files (include): 464 pcre2.h 465 pcre2posix.h 466 467 Man pages (share/man/man{1,3}): 468 pcre2grep.1 469 pcre2test.1 470 pcre2-config.1 471 pcre2.3 472 pcre2*.3 (lots more pages, all starting "pcre2") 473 474 HTML documentation (share/doc/pcre2/html): 475 index.html 476 *.html (lots more pages, hyperlinked from index.html) 477 478 Text file documentation (share/doc/pcre2): 479 AUTHORS 480 COPYING 481 ChangeLog 482 LICENCE 483 NEWS 484 README 485 pcre2.txt (a concatenation of the man(3) pages) 486 pcre2test.txt the pcre2test man page 487 pcre2grep.txt the pcre2grep man page 488 pcre2-config.txt the pcre2-config man page 489 490If you want to remove PCRE2 from your system, you can run "make uninstall". 491This removes all the files that "make install" installed. However, it does not 492remove any directories, because these are often shared with other programs. 493 494 495Retrieving configuration information 496------------------------------------ 497 498Running "make install" installs the command pcre2-config, which can be used to 499recall information about the PCRE2 configuration and installation. For example: 500 501 pcre2-config --version 502 503prints the version number, and 504 505 pcre2-config --libs8 506 507outputs information about where the 8-bit library is installed. This command 508can be included in makefiles for programs that use PCRE2, saving the programmer 509from having to remember too many details. Run pcre2-config with no arguments to 510obtain a list of possible arguments. 511 512The pkg-config command is another system for saving and retrieving information 513about installed libraries. Instead of separate commands for each library, a 514single command is used. For example: 515 516 pkg-config --libs libpcre2-16 517 518The data is held in *.pc files that are installed in a directory called 519<prefix>/lib/pkgconfig. 520 521 522Shared libraries 523---------------- 524 525The default distribution builds PCRE2 as shared libraries and static libraries, 526as long as the operating system supports shared libraries. Shared library 527support relies on the "libtool" script which is built as part of the 528"configure" process. 529 530The libtool script is used to compile and link both shared and static 531libraries. They are placed in a subdirectory called .libs when they are newly 532built. The programs pcre2test and pcre2grep are built to use these uninstalled 533libraries (by means of wrapper scripts in the case of shared libraries). When 534you use "make install" to install shared libraries, pcre2grep and pcre2test are 535automatically re-built to use the newly installed shared libraries before being 536installed themselves. However, the versions left in the build directory still 537use the uninstalled libraries. 538 539To build PCRE2 using static libraries only you must use --disable-shared when 540configuring it. For example: 541 542./configure --prefix=/usr/gnu --disable-shared 543 544Then run "make" in the usual way. Similarly, you can use --disable-static to 545build only shared libraries. 546 547 548Cross-compiling using autotools 549------------------------------- 550 551You can specify CC and CFLAGS in the normal way to the "configure" command, in 552order to cross-compile PCRE2 for some other host. However, you should NOT 553specify --enable-rebuild-chartables, because if you do, the pcre2_dftables.c 554source file is compiled and run on the local host, in order to generate the 555inbuilt character tables (the pcre2_chartables.c file). This will probably not 556work, because pcre2_dftables.c needs to be compiled with the local compiler, 557not the cross compiler. 558 559When --enable-rebuild-chartables is not specified, pcre2_chartables.c is 560created by making a copy of pcre2_chartables.c.dist, which is a default set of 561tables that assumes ASCII code. Cross-compiling with the default tables should 562not be a problem. 563 564If you need to modify the character tables when cross-compiling, you should 565move pcre2_chartables.c.dist out of the way, then compile pcre2_dftables.c by 566hand and run it on the local host to make a new version of 567pcre2_chartables.c.dist. See the pcre2build section "Creating character tables 568at build time" for more details. 569 570 571Making new tarballs 572------------------- 573 574The command "make dist" creates two PCRE2 tarballs, in tar.gz and zip formats. 575The command "make distcheck" does the same, but then does a trial build of the 576new distribution to ensure that it works. 577 578If you have modified any of the man page sources in the doc directory, you 579should first run the PrepareRelease script before making a distribution. This 580script creates the .txt and HTML forms of the documentation from the man pages. 581 582 583Testing PCRE2 584------------- 585 586To test the basic PCRE2 library on a Unix-like system, run the RunTest script. 587There is another script called RunGrepTest that tests the pcre2grep command. 588When JIT support is enabled, a third test program called pcre2_jit_test is 589built. Both the scripts and all the program tests are run if you obey "make 590check". For other environments, see the instructions in NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD. 591 592The RunTest script runs the pcre2test test program (which is documented in its 593own man page) on each of the relevant testinput files in the testdata 594directory, and compares the output with the contents of the corresponding 595testoutput files. RunTest uses a file called testtry to hold the main output 596from pcre2test. Other files whose names begin with "test" are used as working 597files in some tests. 598 599Some tests are relevant only when certain build-time options were selected. For 600example, the tests for UTF-8/16/32 features are run only when Unicode support 601is available. RunTest outputs a comment when it skips a test. 602 603Many (but not all) of the tests that are not skipped are run twice if JIT 604support is available. On the second run, JIT compilation is forced. This 605testing can be suppressed by putting "nojit" on the RunTest command line. 606 607The entire set of tests is run once for each of the 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit 608libraries that are enabled. If you want to run just one set of tests, call 609RunTest with either the -8, -16 or -32 option. 610 611If valgrind is installed, you can run the tests under it by putting "valgrind" 612on the RunTest command line. To run pcre2test on just one or more specific test 613files, give their numbers as arguments to RunTest, for example: 614 615 RunTest 2 7 11 616 617You can also specify ranges of tests such as 3-6 or 3- (meaning 3 to the 618end), or a number preceded by ~ to exclude a test. For example: 619 620 Runtest 3-15 ~10 621 622This runs tests 3 to 15, excluding test 10, and just ~13 runs all the tests 623except test 13. Whatever order the arguments are in, the tests are always run 624in numerical order. 625 626You can also call RunTest with the single argument "list" to cause it to output 627a list of tests. 628 629The test sequence starts with "test 0", which is a special test that has no 630input file, and whose output is not checked. This is because it will be 631different on different hardware and with different configurations. The test 632exists in order to exercise some of pcre2test's code that would not otherwise 633be run. 634 635Tests 1 and 2 can always be run, as they expect only plain text strings (not 636UTF) and make no use of Unicode properties. The first test file can be fed 637directly into the perltest.sh script to check that Perl gives the same results. 638The only difference you should see is in the first few lines, where the Perl 639version is given instead of the PCRE2 version. The second set of tests check 640auxiliary functions, error detection, and run-time flags that are specific to 641PCRE2. It also uses the debugging flags to check some of the internals of 642pcre2_compile(). 643 644If you build PCRE2 with a locale setting that is not the standard C locale, the 645character tables may be different (see next paragraph). In some cases, this may 646cause failures in the second set of tests. For example, in a locale where the 647isprint() function yields TRUE for characters in the range 128-255, the use of 648[:isascii:] inside a character class defines a different set of characters, and 649this shows up in this test as a difference in the compiled code, which is being 650listed for checking. For example, where the comparison test output contains 651[\x00-\x7f] the test might contain [\x00-\xff], and similarly in some other 652cases. This is not a bug in PCRE2. 653 654Test 3 checks pcre2_maketables(), the facility for building a set of character 655tables for a specific locale and using them instead of the default tables. The 656script uses the "locale" command to check for the availability of the "fr_FR", 657"french", or "fr" locale, and uses the first one that it finds. If the "locale" 658command fails, or if its output doesn't include "fr_FR", "french", or "fr" in 659the list of available locales, the third test cannot be run, and a comment is 660output to say why. If running this test produces an error like this: 661 662 ** Failed to set locale "fr_FR" 663 664it means that the given locale is not available on your system, despite being 665listed by "locale". This does not mean that PCRE2 is broken. There are three 666alternative output files for the third test, because three different versions 667of the French locale have been encountered. The test passes if its output 668matches any one of them. 669 670Tests 4 and 5 check UTF and Unicode property support, test 4 being compatible 671with the perltest.sh script, and test 5 checking PCRE2-specific things. 672 673Tests 6 and 7 check the pcre2_dfa_match() alternative matching function, in 674non-UTF mode and UTF-mode with Unicode property support, respectively. 675 676Test 8 checks some internal offsets and code size features, but it is run only 677when Unicode support is enabled. The output is different in 8-bit, 16-bit, and 67832-bit modes and for different link sizes, so there are different output files 679for each mode and link size. 680 681Tests 9 and 10 are run only in 8-bit mode, and tests 11 and 12 are run only in 68216-bit and 32-bit modes. These are tests that generate different output in 6838-bit mode. Each pair are for general cases and Unicode support, respectively. 684 685Test 13 checks the handling of non-UTF characters greater than 255 by 686pcre2_dfa_match() in 16-bit and 32-bit modes. 687 688Test 14 contains some special UTF and UCP tests that give different output for 689different code unit widths. 690 691Test 15 contains a number of tests that must not be run with JIT. They check, 692among other non-JIT things, the match-limiting features of the intepretive 693matcher. 694 695Test 16 is run only when JIT support is not available. It checks that an 696attempt to use JIT has the expected behaviour. 697 698Test 17 is run only when JIT support is available. It checks JIT complete and 699partial modes, match-limiting under JIT, and other JIT-specific features. 700 701Tests 18 and 19 are run only in 8-bit mode. They check the POSIX interface to 702the 8-bit library, without and with Unicode support, respectively. 703 704Test 20 checks the serialization functions by writing a set of compiled 705patterns to a file, and then reloading and checking them. 706 707Tests 21 and 22 test \C support when the use of \C is not locked out, without 708and with UTF support, respectively. Test 23 tests \C when it is locked out. 709 710Tests 24 and 25 test the experimental pattern conversion functions, without and 711with UTF support, respectively. 712 713 714Character tables 715---------------- 716 717For speed, PCRE2 uses four tables for manipulating and identifying characters 718whose code point values are less than 256. By default, a set of tables that is 719built into the library is used. The pcre2_maketables() function can be called 720by an application to create a new set of tables in the current locale. This are 721passed to PCRE2 by calling pcre2_set_character_tables() to put a pointer into a 722compile context. 723 724The source file called pcre2_chartables.c contains the default set of tables. 725By default, this is created as a copy of pcre2_chartables.c.dist, which 726contains tables for ASCII coding. However, if --enable-rebuild-chartables is 727specified for ./configure, a new version of pcre2_chartables.c is built by the 728program pcre2_dftables (compiled from pcre2_dftables.c), which uses the ANSI C 729character handling functions such as isalnum(), isalpha(), isupper(), 730islower(), etc. to build the table sources. This means that the default C 731locale that is set for your system will control the contents of these default 732tables. You can change the default tables by editing pcre2_chartables.c and 733then re-building PCRE2. If you do this, you should take care to ensure that the 734file does not get automatically re-generated. The best way to do this is to 735move pcre2_chartables.c.dist out of the way and replace it with your customized 736tables. 737 738When the pcre2_dftables program is run as a result of specifying 739--enable-rebuild-chartables, it uses the default C locale that is set on your 740system. It does not pay attention to the LC_xxx environment variables. In other 741words, it uses the system's default locale rather than whatever the compiling 742user happens to have set. If you really do want to build a source set of 743character tables in a locale that is specified by the LC_xxx variables, you can 744run the pcre2_dftables program by hand with the -L option. For example: 745 746 ./pcre2_dftables -L pcre2_chartables.c.special 747 748The second argument names the file where the source code for the tables is 749written. The first two 256-byte tables provide lower casing and case flipping 750functions, respectively. The next table consists of a number of 32-byte bit 751maps which identify certain character classes such as digits, "word" 752characters, white space, etc. These are used when building 32-byte bit maps 753that represent character classes for code points less than 256. The final 754256-byte table has bits indicating various character types, as follows: 755 756 1 white space character 757 2 letter 758 4 lower case letter 759 8 decimal digit 760 16 alphanumeric or '_' 761 762You can also specify -b (with or without -L) when running pcre2_dftables. This 763causes the tables to be written in binary instead of as source code. A set of 764binary tables can be loaded into memory by an application and passed to 765pcre2_compile() in the same way as tables created dynamically by calling 766pcre2_maketables(). The tables are just a string of bytes, independent of 767hardware characteristics such as endianness. This means they can be bundled 768with an application that runs in different environments, to ensure consistent 769behaviour. 770 771See also the pcre2build section "Creating character tables at build time". 772 773 774File manifest 775------------- 776 777The distribution should contain the files listed below. 778 779(A) Source files for the PCRE2 library functions and their headers are found in 780 the src directory: 781 782 src/pcre2_dftables.c auxiliary program for building pcre2_chartables.c 783 when --enable-rebuild-chartables is specified 784 785 src/pcre2_chartables.c.dist a default set of character tables that assume 786 ASCII coding; unless --enable-rebuild-chartables is 787 specified, used by copying to pcre2_chartables.c 788 789 src/pcre2posix.c ) 790 src/pcre2_auto_possess.c ) 791 src/pcre2_compile.c ) 792 src/pcre2_config.c ) 793 src/pcre2_context.c ) 794 src/pcre2_convert.c ) 795 src/pcre2_dfa_match.c ) 796 src/pcre2_error.c ) 797 src/pcre2_extuni.c ) 798 src/pcre2_find_bracket.c ) 799 src/pcre2_jit_compile.c ) 800 src/pcre2_jit_match.c ) sources for the functions in the library, 801 src/pcre2_jit_misc.c ) and some internal functions that they use 802 src/pcre2_maketables.c ) 803 src/pcre2_match.c ) 804 src/pcre2_match_data.c ) 805 src/pcre2_newline.c ) 806 src/pcre2_ord2utf.c ) 807 src/pcre2_pattern_info.c ) 808 src/pcre2_script_run.c ) 809 src/pcre2_serialize.c ) 810 src/pcre2_string_utils.c ) 811 src/pcre2_study.c ) 812 src/pcre2_substitute.c ) 813 src/pcre2_substring.c ) 814 src/pcre2_tables.c ) 815 src/pcre2_ucd.c ) 816 src/pcre2_valid_utf.c ) 817 src/pcre2_xclass.c ) 818 819 src/pcre2_printint.c debugging function that is used by pcre2test, 820 src/pcre2_fuzzsupport.c function for (optional) fuzzing support 821 822 src/config.h.in template for config.h, when built by "configure" 823 src/pcre2.h.in template for pcre2.h when built by "configure" 824 src/pcre2posix.h header for the external POSIX wrapper API 825 src/pcre2_internal.h header for internal use 826 src/pcre2_intmodedep.h a mode-specific internal header 827 src/pcre2_ucp.h header for Unicode property handling 828 829 sljit/* source files for the JIT compiler 830 831(B) Source files for programs that use PCRE2: 832 833 src/pcre2demo.c simple demonstration of coding calls to PCRE2 834 src/pcre2grep.c source of a grep utility that uses PCRE2 835 src/pcre2test.c comprehensive test program 836 src/pcre2_jit_test.c JIT test program 837 838(C) Auxiliary files: 839 840 132html script to turn "man" pages into HTML 841 AUTHORS information about the author of PCRE2 842 ChangeLog log of changes to the code 843 CleanTxt script to clean nroff output for txt man pages 844 Detrail script to remove trailing spaces 845 HACKING some notes about the internals of PCRE2 846 INSTALL generic installation instructions 847 LICENCE conditions for the use of PCRE2 848 COPYING the same, using GNU's standard name 849 Makefile.in ) template for Unix Makefile, which is built by 850 ) "configure" 851 Makefile.am ) the automake input that was used to create 852 ) Makefile.in 853 NEWS important changes in this release 854 NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD notes on building PCRE2 without using autotools 855 PrepareRelease script to make preparations for "make dist" 856 README this file 857 RunTest a Unix shell script for running tests 858 RunGrepTest a Unix shell script for pcre2grep tests 859 aclocal.m4 m4 macros (generated by "aclocal") 860 config.guess ) files used by libtool, 861 config.sub ) used only when building a shared library 862 configure a configuring shell script (built by autoconf) 863 configure.ac ) the autoconf input that was used to build 864 ) "configure" and config.h 865 depcomp ) script to find program dependencies, generated by 866 ) automake 867 doc/*.3 man page sources for PCRE2 868 doc/*.1 man page sources for pcre2grep and pcre2test 869 doc/index.html.src the base HTML page 870 doc/html/* HTML documentation 871 doc/pcre2.txt plain text version of the man pages 872 doc/pcre2test.txt plain text documentation of test program 873 install-sh a shell script for installing files 874 libpcre2-8.pc.in template for libpcre2-8.pc for pkg-config 875 libpcre2-16.pc.in template for libpcre2-16.pc for pkg-config 876 libpcre2-32.pc.in template for libpcre2-32.pc for pkg-config 877 libpcre2-posix.pc.in template for libpcre2-posix.pc for pkg-config 878 ltmain.sh file used to build a libtool script 879 missing ) common stub for a few missing GNU programs while 880 ) installing, generated by automake 881 mkinstalldirs script for making install directories 882 perltest.sh Script for running a Perl test program 883 pcre2-config.in source of script which retains PCRE2 information 884 testdata/testinput* test data for main library tests 885 testdata/testoutput* expected test results 886 testdata/grep* input and output for pcre2grep tests 887 testdata/* other supporting test files 888 889(D) Auxiliary files for cmake support 890 891 cmake/COPYING-CMAKE-SCRIPTS 892 cmake/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake 893 cmake/FindEditline.cmake 894 cmake/FindReadline.cmake 895 CMakeLists.txt 896 config-cmake.h.in 897 898(E) Auxiliary files for building PCRE2 "by hand" 899 900 src/pcre2.h.generic ) a version of the public PCRE2 header file 901 ) for use in non-"configure" environments 902 src/config.h.generic ) a version of config.h for use in non-"configure" 903 ) environments 904 905Philip Hazel 906Email local part: Philip.Hazel 907Email domain: gmail.com 908Last updated: 29 October 2021 909