ClickHouse/contrib/libre2/re2/mimics_pcre.cc
2016-06-07 11:23:15 +03:00

186 lines
5.8 KiB
C++

// Copyright 2008 The RE2 Authors. All Rights Reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Determine whether this library should match PCRE exactly
// for a particular Regexp. (If so, the testing framework can
// check that it does.)
//
// This library matches PCRE except in these cases:
// * the regexp contains a repetition of an empty string,
// like (a*)* or (a*)+. In this case, PCRE will treat
// the repetition sequence as ending with an empty string,
// while this library does not.
// * Perl and PCRE differ on whether \v matches \n.
// For historical reasons, this library implements the Perl behavior.
// * Perl and PCRE allow $ in one-line mode to match either the very
// end of the text or just before a \n at the end of the text.
// This library requires it to match only the end of the text.
// * Similarly, Perl and PCRE do not allow ^ in multi-line mode to
// match the end of the text if the last character is a \n.
// This library does allow it.
//
// Regexp::MimicsPCRE checks for any of these conditions.
#include "util/util.h"
#include "re2/regexp.h"
#include "re2/walker-inl.h"
namespace re2 {
// Returns whether re might match an empty string.
static bool CanBeEmptyString(Regexp *re);
// Walker class to compute whether library handles a regexp
// exactly as PCRE would. See comment at top for conditions.
class PCREWalker : public Regexp::Walker<bool> {
public:
PCREWalker() {}
bool PostVisit(Regexp* re, bool parent_arg, bool pre_arg, bool* child_args,
int nchild_args);
bool ShortVisit(Regexp* re, bool a) {
// Should never be called: we use Walk not WalkExponential.
LOG(DFATAL) << "EmptyStringWalker::ShortVisit called";
return a;
}
};
// Called after visiting each of re's children and accumulating
// the return values in child_args. So child_args contains whether
// this library mimics PCRE for those subexpressions.
bool PCREWalker::PostVisit(Regexp* re, bool parent_arg, bool pre_arg,
bool* child_args, int nchild_args) {
// If children failed, so do we.
for (int i = 0; i < nchild_args; i++)
if (!child_args[i])
return false;
// Otherwise look for other reasons to fail.
switch (re->op()) {
// Look for repeated empty string.
case kRegexpStar:
case kRegexpPlus:
case kRegexpQuest:
if (CanBeEmptyString(re->sub()[0]))
return false;
break;
case kRegexpRepeat:
if (re->max() == -1 && CanBeEmptyString(re->sub()[0]))
return false;
break;
// Look for \v
case kRegexpLiteral:
if (re->rune() == '\v')
return false;
break;
// Look for $ in single-line mode.
case kRegexpEndText:
case kRegexpEmptyMatch:
if (re->parse_flags() & Regexp::WasDollar)
return false;
break;
// Look for ^ in multi-line mode.
case kRegexpBeginLine:
// No condition: in single-line mode ^ becomes kRegexpBeginText.
return false;
default:
break;
}
// Not proven guilty.
return true;
}
// Returns whether this regexp's behavior will mimic PCRE's exactly.
bool Regexp::MimicsPCRE() {
PCREWalker w;
return w.Walk(this, true);
}
// Walker class to compute whether a Regexp can match an empty string.
// It is okay to overestimate. For example, \b\B cannot match an empty
// string, because \b and \B are mutually exclusive, but this isn't
// that smart and will say it can. Spurious empty strings
// will reduce the number of regexps we sanity check against PCRE,
// but they won't break anything.
class EmptyStringWalker : public Regexp::Walker<bool> {
public:
EmptyStringWalker() { }
bool PostVisit(Regexp* re, bool parent_arg, bool pre_arg,
bool* child_args, int nchild_args);
bool ShortVisit(Regexp* re, bool a) {
// Should never be called: we use Walk not WalkExponential.
LOG(DFATAL) << "EmptyStringWalker::ShortVisit called";
return a;
}
private:
DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(EmptyStringWalker);
};
// Called after visiting re's children. child_args contains the return
// value from each of the children's PostVisits (i.e., whether each child
// can match an empty string). Returns whether this clause can match an
// empty string.
bool EmptyStringWalker::PostVisit(Regexp* re, bool parent_arg, bool pre_arg,
bool* child_args, int nchild_args) {
switch (re->op()) {
case kRegexpNoMatch: // never empty
case kRegexpLiteral:
case kRegexpAnyChar:
case kRegexpAnyByte:
case kRegexpCharClass:
case kRegexpLiteralString:
return false;
case kRegexpEmptyMatch: // always empty
case kRegexpBeginLine: // always empty, when they match
case kRegexpEndLine:
case kRegexpNoWordBoundary:
case kRegexpWordBoundary:
case kRegexpBeginText:
case kRegexpEndText:
case kRegexpStar: // can always be empty
case kRegexpQuest:
case kRegexpHaveMatch:
return true;
case kRegexpConcat: // can be empty if all children can
for (int i = 0; i < nchild_args; i++)
if (!child_args[i])
return false;
return true;
case kRegexpAlternate: // can be empty if any child can
for (int i = 0; i < nchild_args; i++)
if (child_args[i])
return true;
return false;
case kRegexpPlus: // can be empty if the child can
case kRegexpCapture:
return child_args[0];
case kRegexpRepeat: // can be empty if child can or is x{0}
return child_args[0] || re->min() == 0;
}
return false;
}
// Returns whether re can match an empty string.
static bool CanBeEmptyString(Regexp* re) {
EmptyStringWalker w;
return w.Walk(re, true);
}
} // namespace re2