1MAINTENANCE README FOR PCRE2 2============================ 3 4The files in the "maint" directory of the PCRE2 source contain data, scripts, 5and programs that are used for the maintenance of PCRE2, but which do not form 6part of the PCRE2 distribution tarballs. This document describes these files 7and also contains some notes for maintainers. Its contents are: 8 9 Files in the maint directory 10 Updating to a new Unicode release 11 Preparing for a PCRE2 release 12 Making a PCRE2 release 13 Long-term ideas (wish list) 14 15 16Files in the maint directory 17============================ 18 19GenerateCommon.py 20 A Python module containing data and functions that are used by the other 21 Generate scripts. 22 23GenerateTest26.py 24 A Python script that generates input and expected output test data for test 25 26, which tests certain aspects of Unicode property support. 26 27GenerateUcd.py 28 A Python script that generates the file pcre2_ucd.c from GenerateCommon.py 29 and Unicode data files, which are themselves downloaded from the Unicode web 30 site. The generated file contains the tables for a 2-stage lookup of Unicode 31 properties, along with some auxiliary tables. The script starts with a long 32 comment that gives details of the tables it constructs. 33 34GenerateUcpHeader.py 35 A Python script that generates the file pcre2_ucp.h from GenerateCommon.py 36 and Unicode data files. The generated file defines constants for various 37 Unicode property values. 38 39GenerateUcpTables.py 40 A Python script that generates the file pcre2_ucptables.c from 41 GenerateCommon.py and Unicode data files. The generated file contains tables 42 for looking up Unicode property names. 43 44ManyConfigTests 45 A shell script that runs "configure, make, test" a number of times with 46 different configuration settings. 47 48pcre2_chartables.c.non-standard 49 This is a set of character tables that came from a Windows system. It has 50 characters greater than 128 that are set as spaces, amongst other things. I 51 kept it so that it can be used for testing from time to time. 52 53README 54 This file. 55 56Unicode.tables 57 The files in this directory were downloaded from the Unicode web site. They 58 contain information about Unicode characters and scripts, and are used by the 59 Generate scripts. There is also UnicodeData.txt, which is no longer used by 60 any script, because it is useful occasionally for manually looking up the 61 details of certain characters. However, note that character names in this 62 file such as "Arabic sign sanah" do NOT mean that the character is in a 63 particular script (in this case, Arabic). Scripts.txt and 64 ScriptExtensions.txt are where to look for script information. 65 66ucptest.c 67 A program for testing the Unicode property macros that do lookups in the 68 pcre2_ucd.c data, mainly useful after rebuilding the Unicode property tables. 69 Compile and run this in the "maint" directory (see comments at its head). 70 This program can also be used to find characters with specific properties and 71 to list which properties are supported. 72 73ucptestdata 74 A directory containing four files, testinput{1,2} and testoutput{1,2}, for 75 use in conjunction with the ucptest program. 76 77utf8.c 78 A short, freestanding C program for converting a Unicode code point into a 79 sequence of bytes in the UTF-8 encoding, and vice versa. If its argument is a 80 hex number such as 0x1234, it outputs a list of the equivalent UTF-8 bytes. 81 If its argument is a sequence of concatenated UTF-8 bytes (e.g. 12e188b4) it 82 treats them as a UTF-8 string and outputs the equivalent code points in hex. 83 See comments at its head for details. 84 85 86Updating to a new Unicode release 87================================= 88 89When there is a new release of Unicode, the files in Unicode.tables must be 90refreshed from the web site. Once that is done, the four Python scripts that 91generate files from the Unicode data can be run from within the "maint" 92directory. 93 94Note: Previously, it was necessary to update lists of scripts and their 95abbreviations by hand before running the Python scripts. This is no longer 96necessary because the scripts have been upgraded to extract this information 97themselves. Also, there used to be explicit lists of scripts in two of the man 98pages. This is no longer the case; the pcre2test program can now output a list 99of supported scripts. 100 101You can give an output file name as an argument to the following scripts, but 102by default: 103 104GenerateUcd.py creates pcre2_ucd.c ) 105GenerateUcpHeader.py creates pcre2_ucp.h ) in the current directory 106GenerateUcpTables.py creates pcre2_ucptables.c ) 107 108These files can be compared against the existing versions in the src directory 109to check on any changes before replacing the old files, but you can also 110generate directly into the final location by running: 111 112./GenerateUcd.py ../src/pcre2_ucd.c 113./GenerateUcpHeader.py ../src/pcre2_ucp.h 114./GenerateUcpTables.py ../src/pcre2_ucptables.c 115 116Once the .c and .h files are in the ../src directory, the ucptest program can 117be compiled and used to check that the new tables work properly. The data files 118in ucptestdata are set up to check a number of test characters. See the 119comments at the start of ucptest.c. If there are new scripts, adding a few 120tests to the files in ucptestdata is a good idea. 121 122Finally, you should run the GenerateTest26.py script to regenerate new versions 123of the input and expected output from a series of Unicode property tests that 124are automatically generated from the Unicode data files. By default, the files 125are written to testinput26 and testoutput26 in the current directory, but you 126can give an alternative directory name as an argument to the script. These 127files should eventually be installed in the main testdata directory. 128 129 130Preparing for a PCRE2 release 131============================= 132 133This section contains a checklist of things that I do before building a new 134release. 135 136. Ensure that the version number and version date are correct in configure.ac. 137 138. Update the library version numbers in configure.ac according to the rules 139 given below. 140 141. If new build options or new source files have been added, ensure that they 142 are added to the CMake files as well as to the autoconf files. The relevant 143 files are CMakeLists.txt and config-cmake.h.in. After making a release, test 144 it out with CMake if there have been changes here. 145 146. Run ./autogen.sh to ensure everything is up-to-date. 147 148. Compile and test with many different config options, and combinations of 149 options. Also, test with valgrind by running "RunTest valgrind" and 150 "RunGrepTest valgrind". The script maint/ManyConfigTests now encapsulates 151 this testing. It runs tests with different configurations, and it also runs 152 some of them with valgrind, all of which can take quite some time. 153 154. Run tests in both 32-bit and 64-bit environments if possible. I can no longer 155 run 32-bit tests. 156 157. Run tests with two or more different compilers (e.g. clang and gcc), and 158 make use of -fsanitize=address and friends where possible. For gcc, 159 -fsanitize=undefined -std=gnu99 picks up undefined behaviour at runtime, but 160 needs -fno-sanitize=shift to get rid of warnings for shifts of negative 161 numbers in the JIT compiler. For clang, -fsanitize=address,undefined,integer 162 can be used but -fno-sanitize=alignment,shift,unsigned-integer-overflow must 163 be added when compiling with JIT. Another useful clang option is 164 -fsanitize=signed-integer-overflow 165 166. Do a test build using CMake. Remove src/config.h first, lest it override the 167 version that CMake creates. Also do a CMake unity build to check that it 168 still works: [c]cmake -DCMAKE_UNITY_BUILD=ON sets up a unity build. 169 170. Run perltest.sh on the test data for tests 1 and 4. The output should match 171 the PCRE2 test output, apart from the version identification at the start of 172 each test. Sometimes there are other differences in test 4 if PCRE2 and Perl 173 are using different Unicode releases. The other tests are not Perl-compatible 174 (they use various PCRE2-specific features or options). 175 176. It is possible to test with the emulated memmove() function by undefining 177 HAVE_MEMMOVE and HAVE_BCOPY in config.h, though I do not do this often. 178 179. Documentation: check AUTHORS, ChangeLog (check version and date), LICENCE, 180 NEWS (check version and date), NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD, and README. Many of these 181 won't need changing, but over the long term things do change. 182 183. I used to test new releases myself on a number of different operating 184 systems. For example, on Solaris it is helpful to test using Sun's cc 185 compiler as a change from gcc. Adding -xarch=v9 to the cc options does a 186 64-bit test, but it also needs -S 64 for pcre2test to increase the stack size 187 for test 2. Since I retired I can no longer do much of this. There are 188 automated tests under Ubuntu, Alpine, and Windows that are now set up as 189 GitHub actions. Check that they are running clean. 190 191. The buildbots at http://buildfarm.opencsw.org/ do some automated testing 192 of PCRE2 and should also be checked before putting out a release. 193 194 195Updating version info for libtool 196================================= 197 198This set of rules for updating library version information came from a web page 199whose URL I have forgotten. The version information consists of three parts: 200(current, revision, age). 201 2021. Start with version information of 0:0:0 for each libtool library. 203 2042. Update the version information only immediately before a public release of 205 your software. More frequent updates are unnecessary, and only guarantee 206 that the current interface number gets larger faster. 207 2083. If the library source code has changed at all since the last update, then 209 increment revision; c:r:a becomes c:r+1:a. 210 2114. If any interfaces have been added, removed, or changed since the last 212 update, increment current, and set revision to 0. 213 2145. If any interfaces have been added since the last public release, then 215 increment age. 216 2176. If any interfaces have been removed or changed since the last public 218 release, then set age to 0. 219 220The following explanation may help in understanding the above rules a bit 221better. Consider that there are three possible kinds of reaction from users to 222changes in a shared library: 223 2241. Programs using the previous version may use the new version as a drop-in 225 replacement, and programs using the new version can also work with the 226 previous one. In other words, no recompiling nor relinking is needed. In 227 this case, increment revision only, don't touch current or age. 228 2292. Programs using the previous version may use the new version as a drop-in 230 replacement, but programs using the new version may use APIs not present in 231 the previous one. In other words, a program linking against the new version 232 may fail if linked against the old version at run time. In this case, set 233 revision to 0, increment current and age. 234 2353. Programs may need to be changed, recompiled, relinked in order to use the 236 new version. Increment current, set revision and age to 0. 237 238 239Making a PCRE2 release 240====================== 241 242Run PrepareRelease and commit the files that it changes. The first thing this 243script does is to run CheckMan on the man pages; if it finds any markup errors, 244it reports them and then aborts. Otherwise it removes trailing spaces from 245sources and refreshes the HTML documentation. Update the GitHub repository with 246"git push". 247 248Once PrepareRelease has run clean, run "make distcheck" to create the tarballs 249and the zipball. I then sign these files. Double-check with "git status" that 250the repository is fully up-to-date, then create a new tag and a release on 251GitHub. Upload the tarballs, zipball, and the signatures as "assets" of the 252GitHub release. 253 254When the new release is out, don't forget to tell webmaster@pcre.org and the 255mailing list. 256 257 258Future ideas (wish list) 259======================== 260 261This section records a list of ideas so that they do not get forgotten. They 262vary enormously in their usefulness and potential for implementation. Some are 263very sensible; some are rather wacky. Some have been on this list for many 264years. 265 266. Optimization 267 268 There are always ideas for new optimizations so as to speed up pattern 269 matching. Most of them try to save work by recognizing a non-match without 270 having to scan all the possibilities. These are some that I've recorded: 271 272 * /((A{0,5}){0,5}){0,5}(something complex)/ on a non-matching string is very 273 slow, though Perl is fast. Can we speed up somehow? Convert to {0,125}? 274 OTOH, this is pathological - the user could easily fix it. 275 276 * Turn ={4} into ==== ? (for speed). I once did an experiment, and it seems 277 to have little effect, and maybe makes things worse. 278 279 * "Ends with literal string" - note that a single character doesn't gain much 280 over the existing "required code unit" feature that just remembers one code 281 unit. 282 283 * Remember an initial string rather than just 1 code unit. 284 285 * A required code unit from alternatives - not just the last unit, but an 286 earlier one if common to all alternatives. 287 288 * Friedl contains other ideas. 289 290 * The code does not set initial code unit flags for Unicode property types 291 such as \p; I don't know how much benefit there would be for, for example, 292 setting the bits for 0-9 and all values >= xC0 (in 8-bit mode) when a 293 pattern starts with \p{N}. 294 295. If Perl gets to a consistent state over the settings of capturing sub- 296 patterns inside repeats, see if we can match it. One example of the 297 difference is the matching of /(main(O)?)+/ against mainOmain, where PCRE2 298 leaves $2 set. In Perl, it's unset. Changing this in PCRE2 will be very hard 299 because I think it needs much more state to be remembered. 300 301. A feature to suspend a match via a callout was once requested. 302 303. An option to convert results into character offsets and character lengths. 304 305. A (non-Unix) user wanted pcregrep options to (a) list a file name just once, 306 preceded by a blank line, instead of adding it to every matched line, and (b) 307 support --outputfile=name. 308 309. Define a union for the results from pcre2_pattern_info(). 310 311. Provide a "random access to the subject" facility so that the way in which it 312 is stored is independent of PCRE2. For efficiency, it probably isn't possible 313 to switch this dynamically. It would have to be specified when PCRE2 was 314 compiled. PCRE2 would then call a function every time it wanted a character. 315 316. pcre2grep: add -rs for a sorted recurse. Having to store file names and sort 317 them will of course slow it down. 318 319. Someone suggested --disable-callout to save code space when callouts are 320 never wanted. This seems rather marginal. 321 322. A user suggested a parameter to limit the length of string matched, for 323 example if the parameter is N, the current match should fail if the matched 324 substring exceeds N. This could apply to both match functions. The value 325 could be a new field in the match context. Compare the offset_limit feature, 326 which limits where a match must start. 327 328. Write a function that generates random matching strings for a compiled 329 pattern. 330 331. Pcre2grep: an option to specify the output line separator, either as a string 332 or select from a fixed list. This is not straightforward, because at the 333 moment it outputs whatever is in the input file. 334 335. Improve the code for duplicate checking in pcre2_dfa_match(). An incomplete, 336 non-thread-safe patch showed that this can help performance for patterns 337 where there are many alternatives. However, a simple thread-safe 338 implementation that I tried made things worse in many simple cases, so this 339 is not an obviously good thing. 340 341. PCRE2 cannot at present distinguish between subpatterns with different names, 342 but the same number (created by the use of ?|). In order to do so, a way of 343 remembering *which* subpattern numbered n matched is needed. (*MARK) can 344 perhaps be used as a way round this problem. However, note that Perl does not 345 distinguish: like PCRE2, a name is just an alias for a number in Perl. 346 347. Instead of having #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H in each module, put #include 348 "something" and the the #ifdef appears only in one place, in "something". 349 350. Implement something like (?(R2+)... to check outer recursions. 351 352. If Perl ever supports the POSIX notation [[.something.]] PCRE2 should try 353 to follow. 354 355. A user wanted a way of ignoring all Unicode "mark" characters so that, for 356 example "a" followed by an accent would, together, match "a". This can only 357 be done clumsily at present by using a lookahead such as /(?=a)\X/, which 358 works for "combining" characters. 359 360. Perl supports [\N{x}-\N{y}] as a Unicode range, even in EBCDIC. PCRE2 361 supports \N{U+dd..} everywhere, but not in EBCDIC. 362 363. Unicode stuff from Perl: 364 365 \b{gcb} or \b{g} grapheme cluster boundary 366 \b{sb} sentence boundary 367 \b{wb} word boundary 368 369 See Unicode TR 29. The last two are very much aimed at natural language. 370 371. Allow a callout to specify a number of characters to skip. This can be done 372 compatibly via an extra callout field. 373 374. Allow callouts to return *PRUNE, *COMMIT, *THEN, *SKIP, with and without 375 continuing (that is, with and without an implied *FAIL). A new option, 376 PCRE2_CALLOUT_EXTENDED say, would be needed. This is unlikely ever to be 377 implemented by JIT, so this could be an option for pcre2_match(). 378 379. A limit on substitutions: a user suggested somehow finding a way of making 380 match_limit apply to the whole operation instead of each match separately. 381 382. Some #defines could be replaced with enums to improve robustness. 383 384. There was a request for an option for pcre2_match() to return the longest 385 match. This would mean searching for all possible matches, of course. 386 387. Perl's /a modifier sets Unicode, but restricts \d etc to ASCII characters, 388 which is the PCRE2 default for PCRE2_UTF (use PCRE2_UCP to change). However, 389 Perl also has /aa, which in addition, disables ASCII/non-ASCII caseless 390 matching. Perhaps we need a new option PCRE2_CASELESS_RESTRICT_ASCII. In 391 practice, this just means not using the ucd_caseless_sets[] table. 392 393. There is more that could be done to the oss-fuzz setup (needs some research). 394 A seed corpus could be built. I noted something about $LIB_FUZZING_ENGINE. 395 The test function could make use of get_substrings() to cover more code. 396 397. A neater way of handling recursion file names in pcre2grep, e.g. a single 398 buffer that can grow. See also GitHub issue #2 (recursion looping via 399 symlinks). 400 401. A user suggested that before/after parameters in pcre2grep could have 402 negative values, to list lines near to the matched line, but not necessarily 403 the line itself. For example, --before-context=-1 would list the line *after* 404 each matched line, without showing the matched line. The problem here is what 405 to do with matches that are close together. Maybe a simpler way would be a 406 flag to disable showing matched lines, only valid with either -A or -B? 407 408. There was a suggestiong for a pcre2grep colour default, or possibly a more 409 general PCRE2GREP_OPT, but only for some options - not file names or patterns. 410 411. Breaking loops that match an empty string: perhaps find a way of continuing 412 if *something* has changed, but this might mean remembering additional data. 413 "Something" could be a capture value, but then a list of previous values 414 would be needed to avoid a cycle of changes. 415 416. If a function could be written to find 3-character (or other length) fixed 417 strings, at least one of which must be present for a match, efficient 418 pre-searching of large datasets could be implemented. 419 420. If pcre2grep had --first-line (match only in the first line) it could be 421 efficiently used to find files "starting with xxx". What about --last-line? 422 There was also the suggestion of an option for pcre2grep to scan only the 423 start of a file. I am not keen - this is the job of "head". 424 425. A user requested a means of determining whether a failed match was failed by 426 the start-of-match optimizations, or by running the match engine. Easy enough 427 to define a bit in the match data, but all three matchers would need work. 428 429. Would inlining "simple" recursions provide a useful performance boost for the 430 interpreters? JIT already does some of this, but it may not be worth it for 431 the interpreters. 432 433. Redesign handling of class/nclass/xclass because the compile code logic is 434 currently very contorted and obscure. Also there was a request for a way of 435 re-defining \w (and therefore \W, \b, and \B). An in-pattern sequence such as 436 (?w=[...]) was suggested. Easiest way would be simply to inline the class, 437 with lookarounds for \b and \B. Ideally the setting should last till the end 438 of the group, which means remembering all previous settings; maybe a fixed 439 amount of stack would do - how deep would anyone want to nest these things? 440 See GitHub issue #13 for a compendium of character class issues, including 441 (?[...]) extended classes. 442 443. A user suggested something like --with-build-info to set a build information 444 string that could be retrieved by pcre2_config(). However, there's no 445 facility for a length limit in pcre2_config(), and what would be the 446 encoding? 447 448. Quantified groups with a fixed count currently operate by replicating the 449 group in the compiled bytecode. This may not really matter in these days of 450 gigabyte memory, but perhaps another implementation might be considered. 451 Needs coordination between the interpreters and JIT. 452 453. There are regular requests for variable-length lookbehinds. 454 455. See also any suggestions in the GitHub issues. 456 457Philip Hazel 458Email local part: Philip.Hazel 459Email domain: gmail.com 460Last updated: 25 April 2022 461