1Technical notes about PCRE2 2--------------------------- 3 4These are very rough technical notes that record potentially useful information 5about PCRE2 internals. PCRE2 is a library based on the original PCRE library, 6but with a revised (and incompatible) API. To avoid confusion, the original 7library is referred to as PCRE1 below. For information about testing PCRE2, see 8the pcre2test documentation and the comment at the head of the RunTest file. 9 10PCRE1 releases were up to 8.3x when PCRE2 was developed, and later bug fix 11releases carried on the 8.xx series, up to the final 8.45 release. PCRE2 12releases started at 10.00 to avoid confusion with PCRE1. 13 14 15Historical note 1 16----------------- 17 18Many years ago I implemented some regular expression functions to an algorithm 19suggested by Martin Richards. The rather simple patterns were not Unix-like in 20form, and were quite restricted in what they could do by comparison with Perl. 21The interesting part about the algorithm was that the amount of space required 22to hold the compiled form of an expression was known in advance. The code to 23apply an expression did not operate by backtracking, as the original Henry 24Spencer code and current PCRE2 and Perl code does, but instead checked all 25possibilities simultaneously by keeping a list of current states and checking 26all of them as it advanced through the subject string. In the terminology of 27Jeffrey Friedl's book, it was a "DFA algorithm", though it was not a 28traditional Finite State Machine (FSM). When the pattern was all used up, all 29remaining states were possible matches, and the one matching the longest subset 30of the subject string was chosen. This did not necessarily maximize the 31individual wild portions of the pattern, as is expected in Unix and Perl-style 32regular expressions. 33 34 35Historical note 2 36----------------- 37 38By contrast, the code originally written by Henry Spencer (which was 39subsequently heavily modified for Perl) compiles the expression twice: once in 40a dummy mode in order to find out how much store will be needed, and then for 41real. (The Perl version may or may not still do this; I'm talking about the 42original library.) The execution function operates by backtracking and 43maximizing (or, optionally, minimizing, in Perl) the amount of the subject that 44matches individual wild portions of the pattern. This is an "NFA algorithm" in 45Friedl's terminology. 46 47 48OK, here's the real stuff 49------------------------- 50 51For the set of functions that formed the original PCRE1 library in 1997 (which 52are unrelated to those mentioned above), I tried at first to invent an 53algorithm that used an amount of store bounded by a multiple of the number of 54characters in the pattern, to save on compiling time. However, because of the 55greater complexity in Perl regular expressions, I couldn't do this, even though 56the then current Perl 5.004 patterns were much simpler than those supported 57nowadays. In any case, a first pass through the pattern is helpful for other 58reasons. 59 60 61Support for 16-bit and 32-bit data strings 62------------------------------------------- 63 64The PCRE2 library can be compiled in any combination of 8-bit, 16-bit or 32-bit 65modes, creating up to three different libraries. In the description that 66follows, the word "short" is used for a 16-bit data quantity, and the phrase 67"code unit" is used for a quantity that is a byte in 8-bit mode, a short in 6816-bit mode and a 32-bit word in 32-bit mode. The names of PCRE2 functions are 69given in generic form, without the _8, _16, or _32 suffix. 70 71 72Computing the memory requirement: how it was 73-------------------------------------------- 74 75Up to and including release 6.7, PCRE1 worked by running a very degenerate 76first pass to calculate a maximum memory requirement, and then a second pass to 77do the real compile - which might use a bit less than the predicted amount of 78memory. The idea was that this would turn out faster than the Henry Spencer 79code because the first pass is degenerate and the second pass can just store 80stuff straight into memory, which it knows is big enough. 81 82 83Computing the memory requirement: how it is 84------------------------------------------- 85 86By the time I was working on a potential 6.8 release, the degenerate first pass 87had become very complicated and hard to maintain. Indeed one of the early 88things I did for 6.8 was to fix Yet Another Bug in the memory computation. Then 89I had a flash of inspiration as to how I could run the real compile function in 90a "fake" mode that enables it to compute how much memory it would need, while 91in most cases only ever using a small amount of working memory, and without too 92many tests of the mode that might slow it down. So I refactored the compiling 93functions to work this way. This got rid of about 600 lines of source and made 94further maintenance and development easier. As this was such a major change, I 95never released 6.8, instead upping the number to 7.0 (other quite major changes 96were also present in the 7.0 release). 97 98A side effect of this work was that the previous limit of 200 on the nesting 99depth of parentheses was removed. However, there was a downside: compiling ran 100more slowly than before (30% or more, depending on the pattern) because it now 101did a full analysis of the pattern. My hope was that this would not be a big 102issue, and in the event, nobody has commented on it. 103 104At release 8.34, a limit on the nesting depth of parentheses was re-introduced 105(default 250, settable at build time) so as to put a limit on the amount of 106system stack used by the compile function, which uses recursive function calls 107for nested parenthesized groups. This is a safety feature for environments with 108small stacks where the patterns are provided by users. 109 110 111Yet another pattern scan 112------------------------ 113 114History repeated itself for PCRE2 release 10.20. A number of bugs relating to 115named subpatterns had been discovered by fuzzers. Most of these were related to 116the handling of forward references when it was not known if the named group was 117unique. (References to non-unique names use a different opcode and more 118memory.) The use of duplicate group numbers (the (?| facility) also caused 119issues. 120 121To get around these problems I adopted a new approach by adding a third pass 122over the pattern (really a "pre-pass"), which did nothing other than identify 123all the named subpatterns and their corresponding group numbers. This means 124that the actual compile (both the memory-computing dummy run and the real 125compile) has full knowledge of group names and numbers throughout. Several 126dozen lines of messy code were eliminated, though the new pre-pass was not 127short. In particular, parsing and skipping over [] classes is complicated. 128 129While working on 10.22 I realized that I could simplify yet again by moving 130more of the parsing into the pre-pass, thus avoiding doing it in two places, so 131after 10.22 was released, the code underwent yet another big refactoring. This 132is how it is from 10.23 onwards: 133 134The function called parse_regex() scans the pattern characters, parsing them 135into literal data and meta characters. It converts escapes such as \x{123} 136into literals, handles \Q...\E, and skips over comments and non-significant 137white space. The result of the scanning is put into a vector of 32-bit unsigned 138integers. Values less than 0x80000000 are literal data. Higher values represent 139meta-characters. The top 16-bits of such values identify the meta-character, 140and these are given names such as META_CAPTURE. The lower 16-bits are available 141for data, for example, the capturing group number. The only situation in which 142literal data values greater than 0x7fffffff can appear is when the 32-bit 143library is running in non-UTF mode. This is handled by having a special 144meta-character that is followed by the 32-bit data value. 145 146The size of the parsed pattern vector, when auto-callouts are not enabled, is 147bounded by the length of the pattern (with one exception). The code is written 148so that each item in the pattern uses no more vector elements than the number 149of code units in the item itself. The exception is the aforementioned large 15032-bit number handling. For this reason, 32-bit non-UTF patterns are scanned in 151advance to check for such values. When auto-callouts are enabled, the generous 152assumption is made that there will be a callout for each pattern code unit 153(which of course is only actually true if all code units are literals) plus one 154at the end. A default parsed pattern vector is defined on the system stack, to 155minimize memory handling, but if this is not big enough, heap memory is used. 156 157As before, the actual compiling function is run twice, the first time to 158determine the amount of memory needed for the final compiled pattern. It 159now processes the parsed pattern vector, not the pattern itself, although some 160of the parsed items refer to strings in the pattern - for example, group 161names. As escapes and comments have already been processed, the code is a bit 162simpler than before. 163 164Most errors can be diagnosed during the parsing scan. For those that cannot 165(for example, "lookbehind assertion is not fixed length"), the parsed code 166contains offsets into the pattern so that the actual compiling code can 167report where errors are. 168 169 170The elements of the parsed pattern vector 171----------------------------------------- 172 173The word "offset" below means a code unit offset into the pattern. When 174PCRE2_SIZE (which is usually size_t) is no bigger than uint32_t, an offset is 175stored in a single parsed pattern element. Otherwise (typically on 64-bit 176systems) it occupies two elements. The following meta items occupy just one 177element, with no data: 178 179META_ACCEPT (*ACCEPT) 180META_ASTERISK * 181META_ASTERISK_PLUS *+ 182META_ASTERISK_QUERY *? 183META_ATOMIC (?> start of atomic group 184META_CIRCUMFLEX ^ metacharacter 185META_CLASS [ start of non-empty class 186META_CLASS_EMPTY [] empty class - only with PCRE2_ALLOW_EMPTY_CLASS 187META_CLASS_EMPTY_NOT [^] negative empty class - ditto 188META_CLASS_END ] end of non-empty class 189META_CLASS_NOT [^ start non-empty negative class 190META_COMMIT (*COMMIT) - no argument (see below for with argument) 191META_COND_ASSERT (?(?assertion) 192META_DOLLAR $ metacharacter 193META_DOT . metacharacter 194META_END End of pattern (this value is 0x80000000) 195META_FAIL (*FAIL) 196META_KET ) closing parenthesis 197META_LOOKAHEAD (?= start of lookahead 198META_LOOKAHEAD_NA (*napla: start of non-atomic lookahead 199META_LOOKAHEADNOT (?! start of negative lookahead 200META_NOCAPTURE (?: no capture parens 201META_PLUS + 202META_PLUS_PLUS ++ 203META_PLUS_QUERY +? 204META_PRUNE (*PRUNE) - no argument (see below for with argument) 205META_QUERY ? 206META_QUERY_PLUS ?+ 207META_QUERY_QUERY ?? 208META_RANGE_ESCAPED hyphen in class range with at least one escape 209META_RANGE_LITERAL hyphen in class range defined literally 210META_SKIP (*SKIP) - no argument (see below for with argument) 211META_THEN (*THEN) - no argument (see below for with argument) 212 213The two RANGE values occur only in character classes. They are positioned 214between two literals that define the start and end of the range. In an EBCDIC 215environment it is necessary to know whether either of the range values was 216specified as an escape. In an ASCII/Unicode environment the distinction is not 217relevant. 218 219The following have data in the lower 16 bits, and may be followed by other data 220elements: 221 222META_ALT | alternation 223META_BACKREF back reference 224META_CAPTURE start of capturing group 225META_ESCAPE non-literal escape sequence 226META_RECURSE recursion call 227 228If the data for META_ALT is non-zero, it is inside a lookbehind, and the data 229is the maximum length of its branch (see META_LOOKBEHIND below for more 230detail). 231 232META_BACKREF, META_CAPTURE, and META_RECURSE have the capture group number as 233their data in the lower 16 bits of the element. META_RECURSE is followed by an 234offset, for use in error messages. 235 236META_BACKREF is followed by an offset if the back reference group number is 10 237or more. The offsets of the first occurrences of references to groups whose 238numbers are less than 10 are put in cb->small_ref_offset[] (only the first 239occurrence is useful). On 64-bit systems this avoids using more than two parsed 240pattern elements for items such as \3. The offset is used when an error occurs 241because the reference is to a non-existent group. 242 243META_ESCAPE has an ESC_xxx value as its data. For ESC_P and ESC_p, the next 244element contains the 16-bit type and data property values, packed together. 245ESC_g and ESC_k are used only for named references - numerical ones are turned 246into META_RECURSE or META_BACKREF as appropriate. ESC_g and ESC_k are followed 247by a length and an offset into the pattern to specify the name. 248 249The following have one data item that follows in the next vector element: 250 251META_BIGVALUE Next is a literal >= META_END 252META_POSIX POSIX class item (data identifies the class) 253META_POSIX_NEG negative POSIX class item (ditto) 254 255The following are followed by a length element, then a number of character code 256values (which should match with the length): 257 258META_MARK (*MARK:xxxx) 259META_COMMIT_ARG )*COMMIT:xxxx) 260META_PRUNE_ARG (*PRUNE:xxx) 261META_SKIP_ARG (*SKIP:xxxx) 262META_THEN_ARG (*THEN:xxxx) 263 264The following are followed by a length element, then an offset in the pattern 265that identifies the name: 266 267META_COND_NAME (?(<name>) or (?('name') or (?(name) 268META_COND_RNAME (?(R&name) 269META_COND_RNUMBER (?(Rdigits) 270META_RECURSE_BYNAME (?&name) 271META_BACKREF_BYNAME \k'name' 272 273META_COND_RNUMBER is used for names that start with R and continue with digits, 274because this is an ambiguous case. It could be a back reference to a group with 275that name, or it could be a recursion test on a numbered group. 276 277This one is followed by an offset, for use in error messages, then a number: 278 279META_COND_NUMBER (?([+-]digits) 280 281The following is followed just by an offset, for use in error messages: 282 283META_COND_DEFINE (?(DEFINE) 284 285The following are at first also followed just by an offset for use in error 286messages. After the lengths of the branches of a lookbehind group have been 287checked the error offset is no longer needed. The lower 16 bits of the main 288word are now set to the maximum length of the first branch of the lookbehind 289group, and the second word is set to the mimimum matching length for a 290variable-length lookbehind group, or to LOOKBEHIND_MAX for a group whose 291branches are all of fixed length. These values are used when generating 292OP_REVERSE or OP_VREVERSE for the first branch. The miminum value is also used 293for any subsequent branches because there is only room for one value (the 294branch maximum length) in a META_ALT item. 295 296META_LOOKBEHIND (?<= start of lookbehind 297META_LOOKBEHIND_NA (*naplb: start of non-atomic lookbehind 298META_LOOKBEHINDNOT (?<! start of negative lookbehind 299 300The following are followed by two elements, the minimum and maximum. The 301maximum value is limited to 65535 (MAX_REPEAT_COUNT). A maximum value of 302"unlimited" is represented by REPEAT_UNLIMITED, which is bigger than it: 303 304META_MINMAX {n,m} repeat 305META_MINMAX_PLUS {n,m}+ repeat 306META_MINMAX_QUERY {n,m}? repeat 307 308This one is followed by two elements, giving the new option settings for the 309main and extra options, respectively. 310 311META_OPTIONS (?i) and friends 312 313This one is followed by three elements. The first is 0 for '>' and 1 for '>='; 314the next two are the major and minor numbers: 315 316META_COND_VERSION (?(VERSION<op>x.y) 317 318Callouts are converted into one of two items: 319 320META_CALLOUT_NUMBER (?C with numerical argument 321META_CALLOUT_STRING (?C with string argument 322 323In both cases, the next two elements contain the offset and length of the next 324item in the pattern. Then there is either one callout number, or a length and 325an offset for the string argument. The length includes both delimiters. 326 327 328Traditional matching function 329----------------------------- 330 331The "traditional", and original, matching function is called pcre2_match(), and 332it implements an NFA algorithm, similar to the original Henry Spencer algorithm 333and the way that Perl works. This is not surprising, since it is intended to be 334as compatible with Perl as possible. This is the function most users of PCRE2 335will use most of the time. If PCRE2 is compiled with just-in-time (JIT) 336support, and studying a compiled pattern with JIT is successful, the JIT code 337is run instead of the normal pcre2_match() code, but the result is the same. 338 339 340Supplementary matching function 341------------------------------- 342 343There is also a supplementary matching function called pcre2_dfa_match(). This 344implements a DFA matching algorithm that searches simultaneously for all 345possible matches that start at one point in the subject string. (Going back to 346my roots: see Historical Note 1 above.) This function intreprets the same 347compiled pattern data as pcre2_match(); however, not all the facilities are 348available, and those that are do not always work in quite the same way. See the 349user documentation for details. 350 351The algorithm that is used for pcre2_dfa_match() is not a traditional FSM, 352because it may have a number of states active at one time. More work would be 353needed at compile time to produce a traditional FSM where only one state is 354ever active at once. I believe some other regex matchers work this way. JIT 355support is not available for this kind of matching. 356 357 358Changeable options 359------------------ 360 361The /i, /m, or /s options (PCRE2_CASELESS, PCRE2_MULTILINE, PCRE2_DOTALL) and 362some others may be changed in the middle of patterns by items such as (?i). 363Their processing is handled entirely at compile time by generating different 364opcodes for the different settings. The runtime functions do not need to keep 365track of an option's state. 366 367PCRE2_DUPNAMES, PCRE2_EXTENDED, PCRE2_EXTENDED_MORE, and PCRE2_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE 368are tracked and processed during the parsing pre-pass. The others are handled 369from META_OPTIONS items during the main compile phase. 370 371 372Format of compiled patterns 373--------------------------- 374 375The compiled form of a pattern is a vector of unsigned code units (bytes in 3768-bit mode, shorts in 16-bit mode, 32-bit words in 32-bit mode), containing 377items of variable length. The first code unit in an item contains an opcode, 378and the length of the item is either implicit in the opcode or contained in the 379data that follows it. 380 381In many cases listed below, LINK_SIZE data values are specified for offsets 382within the compiled pattern. LINK_SIZE always specifies a number of bytes. The 383default value for LINK_SIZE is 2, except for the 32-bit library, where it can 384only be 4. The 8-bit library can be compiled to use 3-byte or 4-byte values, 385and the 16-bit library can be compiled to use 4-byte values, though this 386impairs performance. Specifying a LINK_SIZE larger than 2 for these libraries is 387necessary only when patterns whose compiled length is greater than 65535 code 388units are going to be processed. When a LINK_SIZE value uses more than one code 389unit, the most significant unit is first. 390 391In this description, we assume the "normal" compilation options. Data values 392that are counts (e.g. quantifiers) are always two bytes long in 8-bit mode 393(most significant byte first), and one code unit in 16-bit and 32-bit modes. 394 395 396Opcodes with no following data 397------------------------------ 398 399These items are all just one unit long: 400 401 OP_END end of pattern 402 OP_ANY match any one character other than newline 403 OP_ALLANY match any one character, including newline 404 OP_ANYBYTE match any single code unit, even in UTF-8/16 mode 405 OP_SOD match start of data: \A 406 OP_SOM, start of match (subject + offset): \G 407 OP_SET_SOM, set start of match (\K) 408 OP_CIRC ^ (start of data) 409 OP_CIRCM ^ multiline mode (start of data or after newline) 410 OP_NOT_WORD_BOUNDARY \W 411 OP_WORD_BOUNDARY \w 412 OP_NOT_DIGIT \D 413 OP_DIGIT \d 414 OP_NOT_HSPACE \H 415 OP_HSPACE \h 416 OP_NOT_WHITESPACE \S 417 OP_WHITESPACE \s 418 OP_NOT_VSPACE \V 419 OP_VSPACE \v 420 OP_NOT_WORDCHAR \W 421 OP_WORDCHAR \w 422 OP_EODN match end of data or newline at end: \Z 423 OP_EOD match end of data: \z 424 OP_DOLL $ (end of data, or before final newline) 425 OP_DOLLM $ multiline mode (end of data or before newline) 426 OP_EXTUNI match an extended Unicode grapheme cluster 427 OP_ANYNL match any Unicode newline sequence 428 429 OP_ASSERT_ACCEPT ) 430 OP_ACCEPT ) These are Perl 5.10's "backtracking control 431 OP_COMMIT ) verbs". If OP_ACCEPT is inside capturing 432 OP_FAIL ) parentheses, it may be preceded by one or more 433 OP_PRUNE ) OP_CLOSE, each followed by a number that 434 OP_SKIP ) indicates which parentheses must be closed. 435 OP_THEN ) 436 437OP_ASSERT_ACCEPT is used when (*ACCEPT) is encountered within an assertion. 438This ends the assertion, not the entire pattern match. The assertion (?!) is 439always optimized to OP_FAIL. 440 441OP_ALLANY is used for '.' when PCRE2_DOTALL is set. It is also used for \C in 442non-UTF modes and in UTF-32 mode (since one code unit still equals one 443character). Another use is for [^] when empty classes are permitted 444(PCRE2_ALLOW_EMPTY_CLASS is set). 445 446 447Backtracking control verbs 448-------------------------- 449 450Verbs with no arguments generate opcodes with no following data (as listed 451in the section above). 452 453(*MARK:NAME) generates OP_MARK followed by the mark name, preceded by a 454length in one code unit, and followed by a binary zero. The name length is 455limited by the size of the code unit. 456 457(*ACCEPT:NAME) and (*FAIL:NAME) are compiled as (*MARK:NAME)(*ACCEPT) and 458(*MARK:NAME)(*FAIL) respectively. 459 460For (*COMMIT:NAME), (*PRUNE:NAME), (*SKIP:NAME), and (*THEN:NAME), the opcodes 461OP_COMMIT_ARG, OP_PRUNE_ARG, OP_SKIP_ARG, and OP_THEN_ARG are used, with the 462name following in the same format as for OP_MARK. 463 464 465Matching literal characters 466--------------------------- 467 468The OP_CHAR opcode is followed by a single character that is to be matched 469casefully. For caseless matching of characters that have at most two 470case-equivalent code points, OP_CHARI is used. In UTF-8 or UTF-16 modes, the 471character may be more than one code unit long. In UTF-32 mode, characters are 472always exactly one code unit long. 473 474If there is only one character in a character class, OP_CHAR or OP_CHARI is 475used for a positive class, and OP_NOT or OP_NOTI for a negative one (that is, 476for something like [^a]). 477 478Caseless matching (positive or negative) of characters that have more than two 479case-equivalent code points (which is possible only in UTF mode) is handled by 480compiling a Unicode property item (see below), with the pseudo-property 481PT_CLIST. The value of this property is an offset in a vector called 482"ucd_caseless_sets" which identifies the start of a short list of case 483equivalent characters, terminated by the value NOTACHAR (0xffffffff). 484 485 486Repeating single characters 487--------------------------- 488 489The common repeats (*, +, ?), when applied to a single character, use the 490following opcodes, which come in caseful and caseless versions: 491 492 Caseful Caseless 493 OP_STAR OP_STARI 494 OP_MINSTAR OP_MINSTARI 495 OP_POSSTAR OP_POSSTARI 496 OP_PLUS OP_PLUSI 497 OP_MINPLUS OP_MINPLUSI 498 OP_POSPLUS OP_POSPLUSI 499 OP_QUERY OP_QUERYI 500 OP_MINQUERY OP_MINQUERYI 501 OP_POSQUERY OP_POSQUERYI 502 503Each opcode is followed by the character that is to be repeated. In ASCII or 504UTF-32 modes, these are two-code-unit items; in UTF-8 or UTF-16 modes, the 505length is variable. Those with "MIN" in their names are the minimizing 506versions. Those with "POS" in their names are possessive versions. Other kinds 507of repeat make use of these opcodes: 508 509 Caseful Caseless 510 OP_UPTO OP_UPTOI 511 OP_MINUPTO OP_MINUPTOI 512 OP_POSUPTO OP_POSUPTOI 513 OP_EXACT OP_EXACTI 514 515Each of these is followed by a count and then the repeated character. The count 516is two bytes long in 8-bit mode (most significant byte first), or one code unit 517in 16-bit and 32-bit modes. 518 519OP_UPTO matches from 0 to the given number. A repeat with a non-zero minimum 520and a fixed maximum is coded as an OP_EXACT followed by an OP_UPTO (or 521OP_MINUPTO or OPT_POSUPTO). 522 523Another set of matching repeating opcodes (called OP_NOTSTAR, OP_NOTSTARI, 524etc.) are used for repeated, negated, single-character classes such as [^a]*. 525The normal single-character opcodes (OP_STAR, etc.) are used for repeated 526positive single-character classes. 527 528 529Repeating character types 530------------------------- 531 532Repeats of things like \d are done exactly as for single characters, except 533that instead of a character, the opcode for the type (e.g. OP_DIGIT) is stored 534in the next code unit. The opcodes are: 535 536 OP_TYPESTAR 537 OP_TYPEMINSTAR 538 OP_TYPEPOSSTAR 539 OP_TYPEPLUS 540 OP_TYPEMINPLUS 541 OP_TYPEPOSPLUS 542 OP_TYPEQUERY 543 OP_TYPEMINQUERY 544 OP_TYPEPOSQUERY 545 OP_TYPEUPTO 546 OP_TYPEMINUPTO 547 OP_TYPEPOSUPTO 548 OP_TYPEEXACT 549 550 551Match by Unicode property 552------------------------- 553 554OP_PROP and OP_NOTPROP are used for positive and negative matches of a 555character by testing its Unicode property (the \p and \P escape sequences). 556Each is followed by two code units that encode the desired property as a type 557and a value. The types are a set of #defines of the form PT_xxx, and the values 558are enumerations of the form ucp_xx, defined in the pcre2_ucp.h source file. 559The value is relevant only for PT_GC (General Category), PT_PC (Particular 560Category), PT_SC (Script), PT_BIDICL (Bidi Class), PT_BOOL (Boolean property), 561and the pseudo-property PT_CLIST, which is used to identify a list of 562case-equivalent characters when there are three or more (see above). 563 564Repeats of these items use the OP_TYPESTAR etc. set of opcodes, followed by 565three code units: OP_PROP or OP_NOTPROP, and then the desired property type and 566value. 567 568 569Character classes 570----------------- 571 572If there is only one character in a class, OP_CHAR or OP_CHARI is used for a 573positive class, and OP_NOT or OP_NOTI for a negative one (that is, for 574something like [^a]), except when caselessly matching a character that has more 575than two case-equivalent code points (which can happen only in UTF mode). In 576this case a Unicode property item is used, as described above in "Matching 577literal characters". 578 579A set of repeating opcodes (called OP_NOTSTAR etc.) are used for repeated, 580negated, single-character classes. The normal single-character opcodes 581(OP_STAR, etc.) are used for repeated positive single-character classes. 582 583When there is more than one character in a class, and all the code points are 584less than 256, OP_CLASS is used for a positive class, and OP_NCLASS for a 585negative one. In either case, the opcode is followed by a 32-byte (16-short, 5868-word) bit map containing a 1 bit for every character that is acceptable. The 587bits are counted from the least significant end of each unit. In caseless mode, 588bits for both cases are set. 589 590The reason for having both OP_CLASS and OP_NCLASS is so that, in UTF-8 and 59116-bit and 32-bit modes, subject characters with values greater than 255 can be 592handled correctly. For OP_CLASS they do not match, whereas for OP_NCLASS they 593do. 594 595For classes containing characters with values greater than 255 or that contain 596\p or \P, OP_XCLASS is used. It optionally uses a bit map if any acceptable 597code points are less than 256, followed by a list of pairs (for a range) and/or 598single characters and/or properties. In caseless mode, all equivalent 599characters are explicitly listed. 600 601OP_XCLASS is followed by a LINK_SIZE value containing the total length of the 602opcode and its data. This is followed by a code unit containing flag bits: 603XCL_NOT indicates that this is a negative class, and XCL_MAP indicates that a 604bit map is present. There follows the bit map, if XCL_MAP is set, and then a 605sequence of items coded as follows: 606 607 XCL_END marks the end of the list 608 XCL_SINGLE one character follows 609 XCL_RANGE two characters follow 610 XCL_PROP a Unicode property (type, value) follows 611 XCL_NOTPROP a Unicode property (type, value) follows 612 613If a range starts with a code point less than 256 and ends with one greater 614than 255, it is split into two ranges, with characters less than 256 being 615indicated in the bit map, and the rest with XCL_RANGE. 616 617When XCL_NOT is set, the bit map, if present, contains bits for characters that 618are allowed (exactly as for OP_NCLASS), but the list of items that follow it 619specifies characters and properties that are not allowed. 620 621 622Back references 623--------------- 624 625OP_REF (caseful) or OP_REFI (caseless) is followed by a count containing the 626reference number when the reference is to a unique capturing group (either by 627number or by name). When named groups are used, there may be more than one 628group with the same name. In this case, a reference to such a group by name 629generates OP_DNREF or OP_DNREFI. These are followed by two counts: the index 630(not the byte offset) in the group name table of the first entry for the 631required name, followed by the number of groups with the same name. The 632matching code can then search for the first one that is set. 633 634 635Repeating character classes and back references 636----------------------------------------------- 637 638Single-character classes are handled specially (see above). This section 639applies to other classes and also to back references. In both cases, the repeat 640information follows the base item. The matching code looks at the following 641opcode to see if it is one of these: 642 643 OP_CRSTAR 644 OP_CRMINSTAR 645 OP_CRPOSSTAR 646 OP_CRPLUS 647 OP_CRMINPLUS 648 OP_CRPOSPLUS 649 OP_CRQUERY 650 OP_CRMINQUERY 651 OP_CRPOSQUERY 652 OP_CRRANGE 653 OP_CRMINRANGE 654 OP_CRPOSRANGE 655 656All but the last three are single-code-unit items, with no data. The range 657opcodes are followed by the minimum and maximum repeat counts. 658 659 660Brackets and alternation 661------------------------ 662 663A pair of non-capturing round brackets is wrapped round each expression at 664compile time, so alternation always happens in the context of brackets. 665 666[Note for North Americans: "bracket" to some English speakers, including 667myself, can be round, square, curly, or pointy. Hence this usage rather than 668"parentheses".] 669 670Non-capturing brackets use the opcode OP_BRA, capturing brackets use OP_CBRA. A 671bracket opcode is followed by a LINK_SIZE value which gives the offset to the 672next alternative OP_ALT or, if there aren't any branches, to the terminating 673opcode. Each OP_ALT is followed by a LINK_SIZE value giving the offset to the 674next one, or to the final opcode. For capturing brackets, the bracket number is 675a count that immediately follows the offset. 676 677There are several opcodes that mark the end of a subpattern group. OP_KET is 678used for subpatterns that do not repeat indefinitely, OP_KETRMIN and 679OP_KETRMAX are used for indefinite repetitions, minimally or maximally 680respectively, and OP_KETRPOS for possessive repetitions (see below for more 681details). All four are followed by a LINK_SIZE value giving (as a positive 682number) the offset back to the matching opening bracket opcode. 683 684If a subpattern is quantified such that it is permitted to match zero times, it 685is preceded by one of OP_BRAZERO, OP_BRAMINZERO, or OP_SKIPZERO. These are 686single-unit opcodes that tell the matcher that skipping the following 687subpattern entirely is a valid match. In the case of the first two, not 688skipping the pattern is also valid (greedy and non-greedy). The third is used 689when a pattern has the quantifier {0,0}. It cannot be entirely discarded, 690because it may be called as a subroutine from elsewhere in the pattern. 691 692A subpattern with an indefinite maximum repetition is replicated in the 693compiled data its minimum number of times (or once with OP_BRAZERO if the 694minimum is zero), with the final copy terminating with OP_KETRMIN or OP_KETRMAX 695as appropriate. 696 697A subpattern with a bounded maximum repetition is replicated in a nested 698fashion up to the maximum number of times, with OP_BRAZERO or OP_BRAMINZERO 699before each replication after the minimum, so that, for example, (abc){2,5} is 700compiled as (abc)(abc)((abc)((abc)(abc)?)?)?, except that each bracketed group 701has the same number. 702 703When a repeated subpattern has an unbounded upper limit, it is checked to see 704whether it could match an empty string. If this is the case, the opcode in the 705final replication is changed to OP_SBRA or OP_SCBRA. This tells the matcher 706that it needs to check for matching an empty string when it hits OP_KETRMIN or 707OP_KETRMAX, and if so, to break the loop. 708 709 710Possessive brackets 711------------------- 712 713When a repeated group (capturing or non-capturing) is marked as possessive by 714the "+" notation, e.g. (abc)++, different opcodes are used. Their names all 715have POS on the end, e.g. OP_BRAPOS instead of OP_BRA and OP_SCBRAPOS instead 716of OP_SCBRA. The end of such a group is marked by OP_KETRPOS. If the minimum 717repetition is zero, the group is preceded by OP_BRAPOSZERO. 718 719 720Once-only (atomic) groups 721------------------------- 722 723These are just like other subpatterns, but they start with the opcode OP_ONCE. 724The check for matching an empty string in an unbounded repeat is handled 725entirely at runtime, so there is just this one opcode for atomic groups. 726 727 728Assertions 729---------- 730 731Forward assertions are also just like other subpatterns, but starting with one 732of the opcodes OP_ASSERT, OP_ASSERT_NA (non-atomic assertion), or 733OP_ASSERT_NOT. 734 735Backward assertions use the opcodes OP_ASSERTBACK, OP_ASSERTBACK_NA, and 736OP_ASSERTBACK_NOT. If all the branches of a backward assertion are of fixed 737length (not necessarily the same), the first opcode inside each branch is 738OP_REVERSE, followed by an IMM2_SIZE count of the number of characters to move 739back the pointer in the subject string, thus allowing each branch to have a 740different (but fixed) length. 741 742Variable-length backward assertions whose maximum matching length is limited 743are also supported. For such assertions, the first opcode inside each branch is 744OP_VREVERSE, followed by the minimum and maximum lengths for that branch, 745unless these happen to be equal, in which case OP_REVERSE is used. These 746IMM2_SIZE values occupy two code units each in 8-bit mode, and 1 code unit in 74716/32 bit modes. 748 749In ASCII or UTF-32 mode, the character counts in OP_REVERSE and OP_VREVERSE are 750also the number of code units, but in UTF-8/16 mode each character may occupy 751more than one code unit. 752 753 754Conditional subpatterns 755----------------------- 756 757These are like other subpatterns, but they start with the opcode OP_COND, or 758OP_SCOND for one that might match an empty string in an unbounded repeat. 759 760If the condition is a back reference, this is stored at the start of the 761subpattern using the opcode OP_CREF followed by a count containing the 762reference number, provided that the reference is to a unique capturing group. 763If the reference was by name and there is more than one group with that name, 764OP_DNCREF is used instead. It is followed by two counts: the index in the group 765names table, and the number of groups with the same name. The allows the 766matcher to check if any group with the given name is set. 767 768If the condition is "in recursion" (coded as "(?(R)"), or "in recursion of 769group x" (coded as "(?(Rx)"), the group number is stored at the start of the 770subpattern using the opcode OP_RREF (with a value of RREF_ANY (0xffff) for "the 771whole pattern") or OP_DNRREF (with data as for OP_DNCREF). 772 773For a DEFINE condition, OP_FALSE is used (with no associated data). During 774compilation, however, a DEFINE condition is coded as OP_DEFINE so that, when 775the conditional group is complete, there can be a check to ensure that it 776contains only one top-level branch. Once this has happened, the opcode is 777changed to OP_FALSE, so the matcher never sees OP_DEFINE. 778 779There is a special PCRE2-specific condition of the form (VERSION[>]=x.y), which 780tests the PCRE2 version number. This compiles into one of the opcodes OP_TRUE 781or OP_FALSE. 782 783If a condition is not a back reference, recursion test, DEFINE, or VERSION, it 784must start with a parenthesized atomic assertion, whose opcode normally 785immediately follows OP_COND or OP_SCOND. However, if automatic callouts are 786enabled, a callout is inserted immediately before the assertion. It is also 787possible to insert a manual callout at this point. Only assertion conditions 788may have callouts preceding the condition. 789 790A condition that is the negative assertion (?!) is optimized to OP_FAIL in all 791parts of the pattern, so this is another opcode that may appear as a condition. 792It is treated the same as OP_FALSE. 793 794 795Recursion 796--------- 797 798Recursion either matches the current pattern, or some subexpression. The opcode 799OP_RECURSE is followed by a LINK_SIZE value that is the offset to the starting 800bracket from the start of the whole pattern. OP_RECURSE is also used for 801"subroutine" calls, even though they are not strictly a recursion. Up till 802release 10.30 recursions were treated as atomic groups, making them 803incompatible with Perl (but PCRE had them well before Perl did). From 10.30, 804backtracking into recursions is supported. 805 806Repeated recursions used to be wrapped inside OP_ONCE brackets, which not only 807forced no backtracking, but also allowed repetition to be handled as for other 808bracketed groups. From 10.30 onwards, repeated recursions are duplicated for 809their minimum repetitions, and then wrapped in non-capturing brackets for the 810remainder. For example, (?1){3} is treated as (?1)(?1)(?1), and (?1){2,4} is 811treated as (?1)(?1)(?:(?1)){0,2}. 812 813 814Callouts 815-------- 816 817A callout may have either a numerical argument or a string argument. These use 818OP_CALLOUT or OP_CALLOUT_STR, respectively. In each case these are followed by 819two LINK_SIZE values giving the offset in the pattern string to the start of 820the following item, and another count giving the length of this item. These 821values make it possible for pcre2test to output useful tracing information 822using callouts. 823 824In the case of a numeric callout, after these two values there is a single code 825unit containing the callout number, in the range 0-255, with 255 being used for 826callouts that are automatically inserted as a result of the PCRE2_AUTO_CALLOUT 827option. Thus, this opcode item is of fixed length: 828 829 [OP_CALLOUT] [PATTERN_OFFSET] [PATTERN_LENGTH] [NUMBER] 830 831For callouts with string arguments, OP_CALLOUT_STR has three more data items: 832a LINK_SIZE value giving the complete length of the entire opcode item, a 833LINK_SIZE item containing the offset within the pattern string to the start of 834the string argument, and the string itself, preceded by its starting delimiter 835and followed by a binary zero. When a callout function is called, a pointer to 836the actual string is passed, but the delimiter can be accessed as string[-1] if 837the application needs it. In the 8-bit library, the callout in /X(?C'abc')Y/ is 838compiled as the following bytes (decimal numbers represent binary values): 839 840 [OP_CALLOUT_STR] [0] [10] [0] [1] [0] [14] [0] [5] ['] [a] [b] [c] [0] 841 -------- ------- -------- ------- 842 | | | | 843 ------- LINK_SIZE items ------ 844 845Opcode table checking 846--------------------- 847 848The last opcode that is defined in pcre2_internal.h is OP_TABLE_LENGTH. This is 849not a real opcode, but is used to check at compile time that tables indexed by 850opcode are the correct length, in order to catch updating errors. 851 852Philip Hazel 853November 2023 854