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ChangeLog
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ChangeLog for PCRE
------------------
Note that the PCRE 8.xx series (PCRE1) is now in a bugfix-only state. All
development is happening in the PCRE2 10.xx series.
Version 8.40 11-January-2017
----------------------------
1. Using -o with -M in pcregrep could cause unnecessary repeated output when
the match extended over a line boundary.
2. Applied Chris Wilson's second patch (Bugzilla #1681) to CMakeLists.txt for
MSVC static compilation, putting the first patch under a new option.
3. Fix register overwite in JIT when SSE2 acceleration is enabled.
4. Ignore "show all captures" (/=) for DFA matching.
5. Fix JIT unaligned accesses on x86. Patch by Marc Mutz.
6. In any wide-character mode (8-bit UTF or any 16-bit or 32-bit mode),
without PCRE_UCP set, a negative character type such as \D in a positive
class should cause all characters greater than 255 to match, whatever else
is in the class. There was a bug that caused this not to happen if a
Unicode property item was added to such a class, for example [\D\P{Nd}] or
[\W\pL].
7. When pcretest was outputing information from a callout, the caret indicator
for the current position in the subject line was incorrect if it was after
an escape sequence for a character whose code point was greater than
\x{ff}.
8. A pattern such as (?<RA>abc)(?(R)xyz) was incorrectly compiled such that
the conditional was interpreted as a reference to capturing group 1 instead
of a test for recursion. Any group whose name began with R was
misinterpreted in this way. (The reference interpretation should only
happen if the group's name is precisely "R".)
9. A number of bugs have been mended relating to match start-up optimizations
when the first thing in a pattern is a positive lookahead. These all
applied only when PCRE_NO_START_OPTIMIZE was *not* set:
(a) A pattern such as (?=.*X)X$ was incorrectly optimized as if it needed
both an initial 'X' and a following 'X'.
(b) Some patterns starting with an assertion that started with .* were
incorrectly optimized as having to match at the start of the subject or
after a newline. There are cases where this is not true, for example,
(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.{8,16})(?!.*[\s]) matches after the start in lines that
start with spaces. Starting .* in an assertion is no longer taken as an
indication of matching at the start (or after a newline).
Version 8.39 14-June-2016
-------------------------
1. If PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT was set on a pattern that had a (?# comment between
an item and its qualifier (for example, A(?#comment)?B) pcre_compile()
misbehaved. This bug was found by the LLVM fuzzer.
2. Similar to the above, if an isolated \E was present between an item and its
qualifier when PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT was set, pcre_compile() misbehaved. This
bug was found by the LLVM fuzzer.
3. Further to 8.38/46, negated classes such as [^[:^ascii:]\d] were also not
working correctly in UCP mode.
4. The POSIX wrapper function regexec() crashed if the option REG_STARTEND
was set when the pmatch argument was NULL. It now returns REG_INVARG.
5. Allow for up to 32-bit numbers in the ordin() function in pcregrep.
6. An empty \Q\E sequence between an item and its qualifier caused
pcre_compile() to misbehave when auto callouts were enabled. This bug was
found by the LLVM fuzzer.
7. If a pattern that was compiled with PCRE_EXTENDED started with white
space or a #-type comment that was followed by (?-x), which turns off
PCRE_EXTENDED, and there was no subsequent (?x) to turn it on again,
pcre_compile() assumed that (?-x) applied to the whole pattern and
consequently mis-compiled it. This bug was found by the LLVM fuzzer.
8. A call of pcre_copy_named_substring() for a named substring whose number
was greater than the space in the ovector could cause a crash.
9. Yet another buffer overflow bug involved duplicate named groups with a
group that reset capture numbers (compare 8.38/7 below). Once again, I have
just allowed for more memory, even if not needed. (A proper fix is
implemented in PCRE2, but it involves a lot of refactoring.)
10. pcre_get_substring_list() crashed if the use of \K in a match caused the
start of the match to be earlier than the end.
11. Migrating appropriate PCRE2 JIT improvements to PCRE.
12. A pattern such as /(?<=((?C)0))/, which has a callout inside a lookbehind
assertion, caused pcretest to generate incorrect output, and also to read
uninitialized memory (detected by ASAN or valgrind).
13. A pattern that included (*ACCEPT) in the middle of a sufficiently deeply
nested set of parentheses of sufficient size caused an overflow of the
compiling workspace (which was diagnosed, but of course is not desirable).
14. And yet another buffer overflow bug involving duplicate named groups, this
time nested, with a nested back reference. Yet again, I have just allowed
for more memory, because anything more needs all the refactoring that has
been done for PCRE2. An example pattern that provoked this bug is:
/((?J)(?'R'(?'R'(?'R'(?'R'(?'R'(?|(\k'R'))))))))/ and the bug was
registered as CVE-2016-1283.
15. pcretest went into a loop if global matching was requested with an ovector
size less than 2. It now gives an error message. This bug was found by
afl-fuzz.
16. An invalid pattern fragment such as (?(?C)0 was not diagnosing an error
("assertion expected") when (?(?C) was not followed by an opening
parenthesis.
17. Fixed typo ("&&" for "&") in pcre_study(). Fortunately, this could not
actually affect anything, by sheer luck.
18. Applied Chris Wilson's patch (Bugzilla #1681) to CMakeLists.txt for MSVC
static compilation.
19. Modified the RunTest script to incorporate a valgrind suppressions file so
that certain errors, provoked by the SSE2 instruction set when JIT is used,
are ignored.
20. A racing condition is fixed in JIT reported by Mozilla.
21. Minor code refactor to avoid "array subscript is below array bounds"
compiler warning.
22. Minor code refactor to avoid "left shift of negative number" warning.
23. Fix typo causing compile error when 16- or 32-bit JIT is compiled without
UCP support.
24. Refactor to avoid compiler warnings in pcrecpp.cc.
25. Refactor to fix a typo in pcre_jit_test.c
26. Patch to support compiling pcrecpp.cc with Intel compiler.
Version 8.38 23-November-2015
-----------------------------
1. If a group that contained a recursive back reference also contained a
forward reference subroutine call followed by a non-forward-reference
subroutine call, for example /.((?2)(?R)\1)()/, pcre_compile() failed to
compile correct code, leading to undefined behaviour or an internally
detected error. This bug was discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
2. Quantification of certain items (e.g. atomic back references) could cause
incorrect code to be compiled when recursive forward references were
involved. For example, in this pattern: /(?1)()((((((\1++))\x85)+)|))/.
This bug was discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
3. A repeated conditional group whose condition was a reference by name caused
a buffer overflow if there was more than one group with the given name.
This bug was discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
4. A recursive back reference by name within a group that had the same name as
another group caused a buffer overflow. For example:
/(?J)(?'d'(?'d'\g{d}))/. This bug was discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
5. A forward reference by name to a group whose number is the same as the
current group, for example in this pattern: /(?|(\k'Pm')|(?'Pm'))/, caused
a buffer overflow at compile time. This bug was discovered by the LLVM
fuzzer.
6. A lookbehind assertion within a set of mutually recursive subpatterns could
provoke a buffer overflow. This bug was discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
7. Another buffer overflow bug involved duplicate named groups with a
reference between their definition, with a group that reset capture
numbers, for example: /(?J:(?|(?'R')(\k'R')|((?'R'))))/. This has been
fixed by always allowing for more memory, even if not needed. (A proper fix
is implemented in PCRE2, but it involves more refactoring.)
8. There was no check for integer overflow in subroutine calls such as (?123).
9. The table entry for \l in EBCDIC environments was incorrect, leading to its
being treated as a literal 'l' instead of causing an error.
10. There was a buffer overflow if pcre_exec() was called with an ovector of
size 1. This bug was found by american fuzzy lop.
11. If a non-capturing group containing a conditional group that could match
an empty string was repeated, it was not identified as matching an empty
string itself. For example: /^(?:(?(1)x|)+)+$()/.
12. In an EBCDIC environment, pcretest was mishandling the escape sequences
\a and \e in test subject lines.
13. In an EBCDIC environment, \a in a pattern was converted to the ASCII
instead of the EBCDIC value.
14. The handling of \c in an EBCDIC environment has been revised so that it is
now compatible with the specification in Perl's perlebcdic page.
15. The EBCDIC character 0x41 is a non-breaking space, equivalent to 0xa0 in
ASCII/Unicode. This has now been added to the list of characters that are
recognized as white space in EBCDIC.
16. When PCRE was compiled without UCP support, the use of \p and \P gave an
error (correctly) when used outside a class, but did not give an error
within a class.
17. \h within a class was incorrectly compiled in EBCDIC environments.
18. A pattern with an unmatched closing parenthesis that contained a backward
assertion which itself contained a forward reference caused buffer
overflow. And example pattern is: /(?=di(?<=(?1))|(?=(.))))/.
19. JIT should return with error when the compiled pattern requires more stack
space than the maximum.
20. A possessively repeated conditional group that could match an empty string,
for example, /(?(R))*+/, was incorrectly compiled.
21. Fix infinite recursion in the JIT compiler when certain patterns such as
/(?:|a|){100}x/ are analysed.
22. Some patterns with character classes involving [: and \\ were incorrectly
compiled and could cause reading from uninitialized memory or an incorrect
error diagnosis.
23. Pathological patterns containing many nested occurrences of [: caused
pcre_compile() to run for a very long time.
24. A conditional group with only one branch has an implicit empty alternative
branch and must therefore be treated as potentially matching an empty
string.
25. If (?R was followed by - or + incorrect behaviour happened instead of a
diagnostic.
26. Arrange to give up on finding the minimum matching length for overly
complex patterns.
27. Similar to (4) above: in a pattern with duplicated named groups and an
occurrence of (?| it is possible for an apparently non-recursive back
reference to become recursive if a later named group with the relevant
number is encountered. This could lead to a buffer overflow. Wen Guanxing
from Venustech ADLAB discovered this bug.
28. If pcregrep was given the -q option with -c or -l, or when handling a
binary file, it incorrectly wrote output to stdout.
29. The JIT compiler did not restore the control verb head in case of *THEN
control verbs. This issue was found by Karl Skomski with a custom LLVM
fuzzer.
30. Error messages for syntax errors following \g and \k were giving inaccurate
offsets in the pattern.
31. Added a check for integer overflow in conditions (?(<digits>) and
(?(R<digits>). This omission was discovered by Karl Skomski with the LLVM
fuzzer.
32. Handling recursive references such as (?2) when the reference is to a group
later in the pattern uses code that is very hacked about and error-prone.
It has been re-written for PCRE2. Here in PCRE1, a check has been added to
give an internal error if it is obvious that compiling has gone wrong.
33. The JIT compiler should not check repeats after a {0,1} repeat byte code.
This issue was found by Karl Skomski with a custom LLVM fuzzer.
34. The JIT compiler should restore the control chain for empty possessive
repeats. This issue was found by Karl Skomski with a custom LLVM fuzzer.
35. Match limit check added to JIT recursion. This issue was found by Karl
Skomski with a custom LLVM fuzzer.
36. Yet another case similar to 27 above has been circumvented by an
unconditional allocation of extra memory. This issue is fixed "properly" in
PCRE2 by refactoring the way references are handled. Wen Guanxing
from Venustech ADLAB discovered this bug.
37. Fix two assertion fails in JIT. These issues were found by Karl Skomski
with a custom LLVM fuzzer.
38. Fixed a corner case of range optimization in JIT.
39. An incorrect error "overran compiling workspace" was given if there were
exactly enough group forward references such that the last one extended
into the workspace safety margin. The next one would have expanded the
workspace. The test for overflow was not including the safety margin.
40. A match limit issue is fixed in JIT which was found by Karl Skomski
with a custom LLVM fuzzer.
41. Remove the use of /dev/null in testdata/testinput2, because it doesn't
work under Windows. (Why has it taken so long for anyone to notice?)
42. In a character class such as [\W\p{Any}] where both a negative-type escape
("not a word character") and a property escape were present, the property
escape was being ignored.
43. Fix crash caused by very long (*MARK) or (*THEN) names.
44. A sequence such as [[:punct:]b] that is, a POSIX character class followed
by a single ASCII character in a class item, was incorrectly compiled in
UCP mode. The POSIX class got lost, but only if the single character
followed it.
45. [:punct:] in UCP mode was matching some characters in the range 128-255
that should not have been matched.
46. If [:^ascii:] or [:^xdigit:] or [:^cntrl:] are present in a non-negated
class, all characters with code points greater than 255 are in the class.
When a Unicode property was also in the class (if PCRE_UCP is set, escapes
such as \w are turned into Unicode properties), wide characters were not
correctly handled, and could fail to match.
Version 8.37 28-April-2015
--------------------------
1. When an (*ACCEPT) is triggered inside capturing parentheses, it arranges
for those parentheses to be closed with whatever has been captured so far.
However, it was failing to mark any other groups between the hightest
capture so far and the currrent group as "unset". Thus, the ovector for
those groups contained whatever was previously there. An example is the
pattern /(x)|((*ACCEPT))/ when matched against "abcd".
2. If an assertion condition was quantified with a minimum of zero (an odd
thing to do, but it happened), SIGSEGV or other misbehaviour could occur.
3. If a pattern in pcretest input had the P (POSIX) modifier followed by an
unrecognized modifier, a crash could occur.
4. An attempt to do global matching in pcretest with a zero-length ovector
caused a crash.
5. Fixed a memory leak during matching that could occur for a subpattern
subroutine call (recursive or otherwise) if the number of captured groups
that had to be saved was greater than ten.
6. Catch a bad opcode during auto-possessification after compiling a bad UTF
string with NO_UTF_CHECK. This is a tidyup, not a bug fix, as passing bad
UTF with NO_UTF_CHECK is documented as having an undefined outcome.
7. A UTF pattern containing a "not" match of a non-ASCII character and a
subroutine reference could loop at compile time. Example: /[^\xff]((?1))/.
8. When a pattern is compiled, it remembers the highest back reference so that
when matching, if the ovector is too small, extra memory can be obtained to
use instead. A conditional subpattern whose condition is a check on a
capture having happened, such as, for example in the pattern
/^(?:(a)|b)(?(1)A|B)/, is another kind of back reference, but it was not
setting the highest backreference number. This mattered only if pcre_exec()
was called with an ovector that was too small to hold the capture, and there
was no other kind of back reference (a situation which is probably quite
rare). The effect of the bug was that the condition was always treated as
FALSE when the capture could not be consulted, leading to a incorrect
behaviour by pcre_exec(). This bug has been fixed.
9. A reference to a duplicated named group (either a back reference or a test
for being set in a conditional) that occurred in a part of the pattern where
PCRE_DUPNAMES was not set caused the amount of memory needed for the pattern
to be incorrectly calculated, leading to overwriting.
10. A mutually recursive set of back references such as (\2)(\1) caused a
segfault at study time (while trying to find the minimum matching length).
The infinite loop is now broken (with the minimum length unset, that is,
zero).
11. If an assertion that was used as a condition was quantified with a minimum
of zero, matching went wrong. In particular, if the whole group had
unlimited repetition and could match an empty string, a segfault was
likely. The pattern (?(?=0)?)+ is an example that caused this. Perl allows
assertions to be quantified, but not if they are being used as conditions,
so the above pattern is faulted by Perl. PCRE has now been changed so that
it also rejects such patterns.
12. A possessive capturing group such as (a)*+ with a minimum repeat of zero
failed to allow the zero-repeat case if pcre2_exec() was called with an
ovector too small to capture the group.
13. Fixed two bugs in pcretest that were discovered by fuzzing and reported by
Red Hat Product Security:
(a) A crash if /K and /F were both set with the option to save the compiled
pattern.
(b) Another crash if the option to print captured substrings in a callout
was combined with setting a null ovector, for example \O\C+ as a subject
string.
14. A pattern such as "((?2){0,1999}())?", which has a group containing a
forward reference repeated a large (but limited) number of times within a
repeated outer group that has a zero minimum quantifier, caused incorrect
code to be compiled, leading to the error "internal error:
previously-checked referenced subpattern not found" when an incorrect
memory address was read. This bug was reported as "heap overflow",
discovered by Kai Lu of Fortinet's FortiGuard Labs and given the CVE number
CVE-2015-2325.
23. A pattern such as "((?+1)(\1))/" containing a forward reference subroutine
call within a group that also contained a recursive back reference caused
incorrect code to be compiled. This bug was reported as "heap overflow",
discovered by Kai Lu of Fortinet's FortiGuard Labs, and given the CVE
number CVE-2015-2326.
24. Computing the size of the JIT read-only data in advance has been a source
of various issues, and new ones are still appear unfortunately. To fix
existing and future issues, size computation is eliminated from the code,
and replaced by on-demand memory allocation.
25. A pattern such as /(?i)[A-`]/, where characters in the other case are
adjacent to the end of the range, and the range contained characters with
more than one other case, caused incorrect behaviour when compiled in UTF
mode. In that example, the range a-j was left out of the class.
26. Fix JIT compilation of conditional blocks, which assertion
is converted to (*FAIL). E.g: /(?(?!))/.
27. The pattern /(?(?!)^)/ caused references to random memory. This bug was
discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
28. The assertion (?!) is optimized to (*FAIL). This was not handled correctly
when this assertion was used as a condition, for example (?(?!)a|b). In
pcre2_match() it worked by luck; in pcre2_dfa_match() it gave an incorrect
error about an unsupported item.
29. For some types of pattern, for example /Z*(|d*){216}/, the auto-
possessification code could take exponential time to complete. A recursion
depth limit of 1000 has been imposed to limit the resources used by this
optimization.
30. A pattern such as /(*UTF)[\S\V\H]/, which contains a negated special class
such as \S in non-UCP mode, explicit wide characters (> 255) can be ignored
because \S ensures they are all in the class. The code for doing this was
interacting badly with the code for computing the amount of space needed to
compile the pattern, leading to a buffer overflow. This bug was discovered
by the LLVM fuzzer.
31. A pattern such as /((?2)+)((?1))/ which has mutual recursion nested inside
other kinds of group caused stack overflow at compile time. This bug was
discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
32. A pattern such as /(?1)(?#?'){8}(a)/ which had a parenthesized comment
between a subroutine call and its quantifier was incorrectly compiled,
leading to buffer overflow or other errors. This bug was discovered by the
LLVM fuzzer.
33. The illegal pattern /(?(?<E>.*!.*)?)/ was not being diagnosed as missing an
assertion after (?(. The code was failing to check the character after
(?(?< for the ! or = that would indicate a lookbehind assertion. This bug
was discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
34. A pattern such as /X((?2)()*+){2}+/ which has a possessive quantifier with
a fixed maximum following a group that contains a subroutine reference was
incorrectly compiled and could trigger buffer overflow. This bug was
discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
35. A mutual recursion within a lookbehind assertion such as (?<=((?2))((?1)))
caused a stack overflow instead of the diagnosis of a non-fixed length
lookbehind assertion. This bug was discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
36. The use of \K in a positive lookbehind assertion in a non-anchored pattern
(e.g. /(?<=\Ka)/) could make pcregrep loop.
37. There was a similar problem to 36 in pcretest for global matches.
38. If a greedy quantified \X was preceded by \C in UTF mode (e.g. \C\X*),
and a subsequent item in the pattern caused a non-match, backtracking over
the repeated \X did not stop, but carried on past the start of the subject,
causing reference to random memory and/or a segfault. There were also some
other cases where backtracking after \C could crash. This set of bugs was
discovered by the LLVM fuzzer.
39. The function for finding the minimum length of a matching string could take
a very long time if mutual recursion was present many times in a pattern,
for example, /((?2){73}(?2))((?1))/. A better mutual recursion detection
method has been implemented. This infelicity was discovered by the LLVM
fuzzer.
40. Static linking against the PCRE library using the pkg-config module was
failing on missing pthread symbols.
Version 8.36 26-September-2014
------------------------------
1. Got rid of some compiler warnings in the C++ modules that were shown up by
-Wmissing-field-initializers and -Wunused-parameter.
2. The tests for quantifiers being too big (greater than 65535) were being
applied after reading the number, and stupidly assuming that integer
overflow would give a negative number. The tests are now applied as the
numbers are read.
3. Tidy code in pcre_exec.c where two branches that used to be different are
now the same.
4. The JIT compiler did not generate match limit checks for certain
bracketed expressions with quantifiers. This may lead to exponential
backtracking, instead of returning with PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT. This
issue should be resolved now.
5. Fixed an issue, which occures when nested alternatives are optimized
with table jumps.
6. Inserted two casts and changed some ints to size_t in the light of some
reported 64-bit compiler warnings (Bugzilla 1477).
7. Fixed a bug concerned with zero-minimum possessive groups that could match
an empty string, which sometimes were behaving incorrectly in the
interpreter (though correctly in the JIT matcher). This pcretest input is
an example:
'\A(?:[^"]++|"(?:[^"]*+|"")*+")++'
NON QUOTED "QUOT""ED" AFTER "NOT MATCHED
the interpreter was reporting a match of 'NON QUOTED ' only, whereas the
JIT matcher and Perl both matched 'NON QUOTED "QUOT""ED" AFTER '. The test
for an empty string was breaking the inner loop and carrying on at a lower
level, when possessive repeated groups should always return to a higher
level as they have no backtrack points in them. The empty string test now
occurs at the outer level.
8. Fixed a bug that was incorrectly auto-possessifying \w+ in the pattern
^\w+(?>\s*)(?<=\w) which caused it not to match "test test".
9. Give a compile-time error for \o{} (as Perl does) and for \x{} (which Perl
doesn't).
10. Change 8.34/15 introduced a bug that caused the amount of memory needed
to hold a pattern to be incorrectly computed (too small) when there were
named back references to duplicated names. This could cause "internal
error: code overflow" or "double free or corruption" or other memory
handling errors.
11. When named subpatterns had the same prefixes, back references could be
confused. For example, in this pattern:
/(?P<Name>a)?(?P<Name2>b)?(?(<Name>)c|d)*l/
the reference to 'Name' was incorrectly treated as a reference to a
duplicate name.
12. A pattern such as /^s?c/mi8 where the optional character has more than
one "other case" was incorrectly compiled such that it would only try to
match starting at "c".
13. When a pattern starting with \s was studied, VT was not included in the
list of possible starting characters; this should have been part of the
8.34/18 patch.
14. If a character class started [\Qx]... where x is any character, the class
was incorrectly terminated at the ].
15. If a pattern that started with a caseless match for a character with more
than one "other case" was studied, PCRE did not set up the starting code
unit bit map for the list of possible characters. Now it does. This is an
optimization improvement, not a bug fix.
16. The Unicode data tables have been updated to Unicode 7.0.0.
17. Fixed a number of memory leaks in pcregrep.
18. Avoid a compiler warning (from some compilers) for a function call with
a cast that removes "const" from an lvalue by using an intermediate
variable (to which the compiler does not object).
19. Incorrect code was compiled if a group that contained an internal recursive
back reference was optional (had quantifier with a minimum of zero). This
example compiled incorrect code: /(((a\2)|(a*)\g<-1>))*/ and other examples
caused segmentation faults because of stack overflows at compile time.
20. A pattern such as /((?(R)a|(?1)))+/, which contains a recursion within a
group that is quantified with an indefinite repeat, caused a compile-time
loop which used up all the system stack and provoked a segmentation fault.
This was not the same bug as 19 above.
21. Add PCRECPP_EXP_DECL declaration to operator<< in pcre_stringpiece.h.
Patch by Mike Frysinger.
Version 8.35 04-April-2014
--------------------------
1. A new flag is set, when property checks are present in an XCLASS.
When this flag is not set, PCRE can perform certain optimizations
such as studying these XCLASS-es.
2. The auto-possessification of character sets were improved: a normal
and an extended character set can be compared now. Furthermore
the JIT compiler optimizes more character set checks.
3. Got rid of some compiler warnings for potentially uninitialized variables
that show up only when compiled with -O2.
4. A pattern such as (?=ab\K) that uses \K in an assertion can set the start
of a match later then the end of the match. The pcretest program was not
handling the case sensibly - it was outputting from the start to the next
binary zero. It now reports this situation in a message, and outputs the
text from the end to the start.
5. Fast forward search is improved in JIT. Instead of the first three
characters, any three characters with fixed position can be searched.
Search order: first, last, middle.
6. Improve character range checks in JIT. Characters are read by an inprecise
function now, which returns with an unknown value if the character code is
above a certain threshold (e.g: 256). The only limitation is that the value
must be bigger than the threshold as well. This function is useful when
the characters above the threshold are handled in the same way.
7. The macros whose names start with RAWUCHAR are placeholders for a future
mode in which only the bottom 21 bits of 32-bit data items are used. To
make this more memorable for those maintaining the code, the names have
been changed to start with UCHAR21, and an extensive comment has been added
to their definition.
8. Add missing (new) files sljitNativeTILEGX.c and sljitNativeTILEGX-encoder.c
to the export list in Makefile.am (they were accidentally omitted from the
8.34 tarball).
9. The informational output from pcretest used the phrase "starting byte set"
which is inappropriate for the 16-bit and 32-bit libraries. As the output
for "first char" and "need char" really means "non-UTF-char", I've changed
"byte" to "char", and slightly reworded the output. The documentation about
these values has also been (I hope) clarified.
10. Another JIT related optimization: use table jumps for selecting the correct
backtracking path, when more than four alternatives are present inside a
bracket.
11. Empty match is not possible, when the minimum length is greater than zero,
and there is no \K in the pattern. JIT should avoid empty match checks in
such cases.
12. In a caseless character class with UCP support, when a character with more
than one alternative case was not the first character of a range, not all
the alternative cases were added to the class. For example, s and \x{17f}
are both alternative cases for S: the class [RST] was handled correctly,
but [R-T] was not.
13. The configure.ac file always checked for pthread support when JIT was
enabled. This is not used in Windows, so I have put this test inside a
check for the presence of windows.h (which was already tested for).
14. Improve pattern prefix search by a simplified Boyer-Moore algorithm in JIT.
The algorithm provides a way to skip certain starting offsets, and usually
faster than linear prefix searches.
15. Change 13 for 8.20 updated RunTest to check for the 'fr' locale as well
as for 'fr_FR' and 'french'. For some reason, however, it then used the
Windows-specific input and output files, which have 'french' screwed in.
So this could never have worked. One of the problems with locales is that
they aren't always the same. I have now updated RunTest so that it checks
the output of the locale test (test 3) against three different output
files, and it allows the test to pass if any one of them matches. With luck
this should make the test pass on some versions of Solaris where it was
failing. Because of the uncertainty, the script did not used to stop if
test 3 failed; it now does. If further versions of a French locale ever
come to light, they can now easily be added.
16. If --with-pcregrep-bufsize was given a non-integer value such as "50K",
there was a message during ./configure, but it did not stop. This now
provokes an error. The invalid example in README has been corrected.
If a value less than the minimum is given, the minimum value has always
been used, but now a warning is given.
17. If --enable-bsr-anycrlf was set, the special 16/32-bit test failed. This
was a bug in the test system, which is now fixed. Also, the list of various
configurations that are tested for each release did not have one with both
16/32 bits and --enable-bar-anycrlf. It now does.
18. pcretest was missing "-C bsr" for displaying the \R default setting.
19. Little endian PowerPC systems are supported now by the JIT compiler.
20. The fast forward newline mechanism could enter to an infinite loop on
certain invalid UTF-8 input. Although we don't support these cases
this issue can be fixed by a performance optimization.
21. Change 33 of 8.34 is not sufficient to ensure stack safety because it does
not take account if existing stack usage. There is now a new global
variable called pcre_stack_guard that can be set to point to an external
function to check stack availability. It is called at the start of
processing every parenthesized group.
22. A typo in the code meant that in ungreedy mode the max/min qualifier
behaved like a min-possessive qualifier, and, for example, /a{1,3}b/U did
not match "ab".
23. When UTF was disabled, the JIT program reported some incorrect compile
errors. These messages are silenced now.
24. Experimental support for ARM-64 and MIPS-64 has been added to the JIT
compiler.
25. Change all the temporary files used in RunGrepTest to be different to those
used by RunTest so that the tests can be run simultaneously, for example by
"make -j check".
Version 8.34 15-December-2013
-----------------------------
1. Add pcre[16|32]_jit_free_unused_memory to forcibly free unused JIT
executable memory. Patch inspired by Carsten Klein.
2. ./configure --enable-coverage defined SUPPORT_GCOV in config.h, although
this macro is never tested and has no effect, because the work to support
coverage involves only compiling and linking options and special targets in
the Makefile. The comment in config.h implied that defining the macro would
enable coverage support, which is totally false. There was also support for
setting this macro in the CMake files (my fault, I just copied it from
configure). SUPPORT_GCOV has now been removed.
3. Make a small performance improvement in strlen16() and strlen32() in
pcretest.
4. Change 36 for 8.33 left some unreachable statements in pcre_exec.c,
detected by the Solaris compiler (gcc doesn't seem to be able to diagnose
these cases). There was also one in pcretest.c.
5. Cleaned up a "may be uninitialized" compiler warning in pcre_exec.c.
6. In UTF mode, the code for checking whether a group could match an empty
string (which is used for indefinitely repeated groups to allow for
breaking an infinite loop) was broken when the group contained a repeated
negated single-character class with a character that occupied more than one
data item and had a minimum repetition of zero (for example, [^\x{100}]* in
UTF-8 mode). The effect was undefined: the group might or might not be
deemed as matching an empty string, or the program might have crashed.
7. The code for checking whether a group could match an empty string was not
recognizing that \h, \H, \v, \V, and \R must match a character.
8. Implemented PCRE_INFO_MATCH_EMPTY, which yields 1 if the pattern can match
an empty string. If it can, pcretest shows this in its information output.
9. Fixed two related bugs that applied to Unicode extended grapheme clusters
that were repeated with a maximizing qualifier (e.g. \X* or \X{2,5}) when
matched by pcre_exec() without using JIT:
(a) If the rest of the pattern did not match after a maximal run of
grapheme clusters, the code for backing up to try with fewer of them
did not always back up over a full grapheme when characters that do not
have the modifier quality were involved, e.g. Hangul syllables.
(b) If the match point in a subject started with modifier character, and
there was no match, the code could incorrectly back up beyond the match
point, and potentially beyond the first character in the subject,
leading to a segfault or an incorrect match result.
10. A conditional group with an assertion condition could lead to PCRE
recording an incorrect first data item for a match if no other first data
item was recorded. For example, the pattern (?(?=ab)ab) recorded "a" as a
first data item, and therefore matched "ca" after "c" instead of at the
start.
11. Change 40 for 8.33 (allowing pcregrep to find empty strings) showed up a
bug that caused the command "echo a | ./pcregrep -M '|a'" to loop.
12. The source of pcregrep now includes z/OS-specific code so that it can be
compiled for z/OS as part of the special z/OS distribution.
13. Added the -T and -TM options to pcretest.
14. The code in pcre_compile.c for creating the table of named capturing groups
has been refactored. Instead of creating the table dynamically during the
actual compiling pass, the information is remembered during the pre-compile
pass (on the stack unless there are more than 20 named groups, in which
case malloc() is used) and the whole table is created before the actual
compile happens. This has simplified the code (it is now nearly 150 lines
shorter) and prepared the way for better handling of references to groups
with duplicate names.
15. A back reference to a named subpattern when there is more than one of the
same name now checks them in the order in which they appear in the pattern.
The first one that is set is used for the reference. Previously only the
first one was inspected. This change makes PCRE more compatible with Perl.
16. Unicode character properties were updated from Unicode 6.3.0.
17. The compile-time code for auto-possessification has been refactored, based
on a patch by Zoltan Herczeg. It now happens after instead of during
compilation. The code is cleaner, and more cases are handled. The option
PCRE_NO_AUTO_POSSESS is added for testing purposes, and the -O and /O
options in pcretest are provided to set it. It can also be set by
(*NO_AUTO_POSSESS) at the start of a pattern.
18. The character VT has been added to the default ("C" locale) set of
characters that match \s and are generally treated as white space,
following this same change in Perl 5.18. There is now no difference between
"Perl space" and "POSIX space". Whether VT is treated as white space in
other locales depends on the locale.
19. The code for checking named groups as conditions, either for being set or
for being recursed, has been refactored (this is related to 14 and 15
above). Processing unduplicated named groups should now be as fast at
numerical groups, and processing duplicated groups should be faster than
before.
20. Two patches to the CMake build system, by Alexander Barkov:
(1) Replace the "source" command by "." in CMakeLists.txt because
"source" is a bash-ism.
(2) Add missing HAVE_STDINT_H and HAVE_INTTYPES_H to config-cmake.h.in;
without these the CMake build does not work on Solaris.
21. Perl has changed its handling of \8 and \9. If there is no previously
encountered capturing group of those numbers, they are treated as the
literal characters 8 and 9 instead of a binary zero followed by the
literals. PCRE now does the same.
22. Following Perl, added \o{} to specify codepoints in octal, making it
possible to specify values greater than 0777 and also making them
unambiguous.
23. Perl now gives an error for missing closing braces after \x{... instead of
treating the string as literal. PCRE now does the same.
24. RunTest used to grumble if an inappropriate test was selected explicitly,
but just skip it when running all tests. This make it awkward to run ranges
of tests when one of them was inappropriate. Now it just skips any
inappropriate tests, as it always did when running all tests.
25. If PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT and PCRE_UCP were set for a pattern that contained
character types such as \d or \w, too many callouts were inserted, and the
data that they returned was rubbish.
26. In UCP mode, \s was not matching two of the characters that Perl matches,
namely NEL (U+0085) and MONGOLIAN VOWEL SEPARATOR (U+180E), though they
were matched by \h. The code has now been refactored so that the lists of
the horizontal and vertical whitespace characters used for \h and \v (which
are defined only in one place) are now also used for \s.
27. Add JIT support for the 64 bit TileGX architecture.
Patch by Jiong Wang (Tilera Corporation).
28. Possessive quantifiers for classes (both explicit and automatically
generated) now use special opcodes instead of wrapping in ONCE brackets.
29. Whereas an item such as A{4}+ ignored the possessivenes of the quantifier
(because it's meaningless), this was not happening when PCRE_CASELESS was
set. Not wrong, but inefficient.
30. Updated perltest.pl to add /u (force Unicode mode) when /W (use Unicode
properties for \w, \d, etc) is present in a test regex. Otherwise if the
test contains no characters greater than 255, Perl doesn't realise it
should be using Unicode semantics.
31. Upgraded the handling of the POSIX classes [:graph:], [:print:], and
[:punct:] when PCRE_UCP is set so as to include the same characters as Perl
does in Unicode mode.
32. Added the "forbid" facility to pcretest so that putting tests into the
wrong test files can sometimes be quickly detected.
33. There is now a limit (default 250) on the depth of nesting of parentheses.
This limit is imposed to control the amount of system stack used at compile
time. It can be changed at build time by --with-parens-nest-limit=xxx or
the equivalent in CMake.
34. Character classes such as [A-\d] or [a-[:digit:]] now cause compile-time
errors. Perl warns for these when in warning mode, but PCRE has no facility
for giving warnings.
35. Change 34 for 8.13 allowed quantifiers on assertions, because Perl does.
However, this was not working for (?!) because it is optimized to (*FAIL),
for which PCRE does not allow quantifiers. The optimization is now disabled
when a quantifier follows (?!). I can't see any use for this, but it makes
things uniform.
36. Perl no longer allows group names to start with digits, so I have made this
change also in PCRE. It simplifies the code a bit.
37. In extended mode, Perl ignores spaces before a + that indicates a
possessive quantifier. PCRE allowed a space before the quantifier, but not
before the possessive +. It now does.
38. The use of \K (reset reported match start) within a repeated possessive
group such as (a\Kb)*+ was not working.
40. Document that the same character tables must be used at compile time and
run time, and that the facility to pass tables to pcre_exec() and
pcre_dfa_exec() is for use only with saved/restored patterns.
41. Applied Jeff Trawick's patch CMakeLists.txt, which "provides two new
features for Builds with MSVC:
1. Support pcre.rc and/or pcreposix.rc (as is already done for MinGW
builds). The .rc files can be used to set FileDescription and many other
attributes.
2. Add an option (-DINSTALL_MSVC_PDB) to enable installation of .pdb files.
This allows higher-level build scripts which want .pdb files to avoid
hard-coding the exact files needed."
42. Added support for [[:<:]] and [[:>:]] as used in the BSD POSIX library to
mean "start of word" and "end of word", respectively, as a transition aid.
43. A minimizing repeat of a class containing codepoints greater than 255 in
non-UTF 16-bit or 32-bit modes caused an internal error when PCRE was
compiled to use the heap for recursion.
44. Got rid of some compiler warnings for unused variables when UTF but not UCP
is configured.
Version 8.33 28-May-2013
------------------------
1. Added 'U' to some constants that are compared to unsigned integers, to
avoid compiler signed/unsigned warnings. Added (int) casts to unsigned
variables that are added to signed variables, to ensure the result is
signed and can be negated.
2. Applied patch by Daniel Richard G for quashing MSVC warnings to the
CMake config files.
3. Revise the creation of config.h.generic so that all boolean macros are
#undefined, whereas non-boolean macros are #ifndef/#endif-ed. This makes
overriding via -D on the command line possible.
4. Changing the definition of the variable "op" in pcre_exec.c from pcre_uchar
to unsigned int is reported to make a quite noticeable speed difference in
a specific Windows environment. Testing on Linux did also appear to show
some benefit (and it is clearly not harmful). Also fixed the definition of
Xop which should be unsigned.
5. Related to (4), changing the definition of the intermediate variable cc
in repeated character loops from pcre_uchar to pcre_uint32 also gave speed
improvements.
6. Fix forward search in JIT when link size is 3 or greater. Also removed some
unnecessary spaces.
7. Adjust autogen.sh and configure.ac to lose warnings given by automake 1.12
and later.
8. Fix two buffer over read issues in 16 and 32 bit modes. Affects JIT only.
9. Optimizing fast_forward_start_bits in JIT.
10. Adding support for callouts in JIT, and fixing some issues revealed
during this work. Namely:
(a) Unoptimized capturing brackets incorrectly reset on backtrack.
(b) Minimum length was not checked before the matching is started.
11. The value of capture_last that is passed to callouts was incorrect in some
cases when there was a capture on one path that was subsequently abandoned
after a backtrack. Also, the capture_last value is now reset after a
recursion, since all captures are also reset in this case.
12. The interpreter no longer returns the "too many substrings" error in the
case when an overflowing capture is in a branch that is subsequently
abandoned after a backtrack.
13. In the pathological case when an offset vector of size 2 is used, pcretest
now prints out the matched string after a yield of 0 or 1.
14. Inlining subpatterns in recursions, when certain conditions are fulfilled.
Only supported by the JIT compiler at the moment.
15. JIT compiler now supports 32 bit Macs thanks to Lawrence Velazquez.
16. Partial matches now set offsets[2] to the "bumpalong" value, that is, the
offset of the starting point of the matching process, provided the offsets
vector is large enough.
17. The \A escape now records a lookbehind value of 1, though its execution
does not actually inspect the previous character. This is to ensure that,
in partial multi-segment matching, at least one character from the old
segment is retained when a new segment is processed. Otherwise, if there
are no lookbehinds in the pattern, \A might match incorrectly at the start
of a new segment.
18. Added some #ifdef __VMS code into pcretest.c to help VMS implementations.
19. Redefined some pcre_uchar variables in pcre_exec.c as pcre_uint32; this
gives some modest performance improvement in 8-bit mode.
20. Added the PCRE-specific property \p{Xuc} for matching characters that can
be expressed in certain programming languages using Universal Character
Names.
21. Unicode validation has been updated in the light of Unicode Corrigendum #9,
which points out that "non characters" are not "characters that may not
appear in Unicode strings" but rather "characters that are reserved for
internal use and have only local meaning".
22. When a pattern was compiled with automatic callouts (PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT) and
there was a conditional group that depended on an assertion, if the
assertion was false, the callout that immediately followed the alternation
in the condition was skipped when pcre_exec() was used for matching.