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      6 <h1>pcrebuild man page</h1>
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     11 This page is part of the PCRE HTML documentation. It was generated automatically
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     13 man page, in case the conversion went wrong.
     14 <br>
     15 <ul>
     16 <li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">BUILDING PCRE</a>
     17 <li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">PCRE BUILD-TIME OPTIONS</a>
     18 <li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">BUILDING 8-BIT, 16-BIT AND 32-BIT LIBRARIES</a>
     19 <li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">BUILDING SHARED AND STATIC LIBRARIES</a>
     20 <li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">C++ SUPPORT</a>
     21 <li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">UTF-8, UTF-16 AND UTF-32 SUPPORT</a>
     22 <li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">UNICODE CHARACTER PROPERTY SUPPORT</a>
     23 <li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">JUST-IN-TIME COMPILER SUPPORT</a>
     24 <li><a name="TOC9" href="#SEC9">CODE VALUE OF NEWLINE</a>
     25 <li><a name="TOC10" href="#SEC10">WHAT \R MATCHES</a>
     26 <li><a name="TOC11" href="#SEC11">POSIX MALLOC USAGE</a>
     27 <li><a name="TOC12" href="#SEC12">HANDLING VERY LARGE PATTERNS</a>
     28 <li><a name="TOC13" href="#SEC13">AVOIDING EXCESSIVE STACK USAGE</a>
     29 <li><a name="TOC14" href="#SEC14">LIMITING PCRE RESOURCE USAGE</a>
     30 <li><a name="TOC15" href="#SEC15">CREATING CHARACTER TABLES AT BUILD TIME</a>
     31 <li><a name="TOC16" href="#SEC16">USING EBCDIC CODE</a>
     32 <li><a name="TOC17" href="#SEC17">PCREGREP OPTIONS FOR COMPRESSED FILE SUPPORT</a>
     33 <li><a name="TOC18" href="#SEC18">PCREGREP BUFFER SIZE</a>
     34 <li><a name="TOC19" href="#SEC19">PCRETEST OPTION FOR LIBREADLINE SUPPORT</a>
     35 <li><a name="TOC20" href="#SEC20">DEBUGGING WITH VALGRIND SUPPORT</a>
     36 <li><a name="TOC21" href="#SEC21">CODE COVERAGE REPORTING</a>
     37 <li><a name="TOC22" href="#SEC22">SEE ALSO</a>
     38 <li><a name="TOC23" href="#SEC23">AUTHOR</a>
     39 <li><a name="TOC24" href="#SEC24">REVISION</a>
     40 </ul>
     41 <br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">BUILDING PCRE</a><br>
     42 <P>
     43 PCRE is distributed with a <b>configure</b> script that can be used to build the
     44 library in Unix-like environments using the applications known as Autotools.
     45 Also in the distribution are files to support building using <b>CMake</b>
     46 instead of <b>configure</b>. The text file
     47 <a href="README.txt"><b>README</b></a>
     48 contains general information about building with Autotools (some of which is
     49 repeated below), and also has some comments about building on various operating
     50 systems. There is a lot more information about building PCRE without using
     51 Autotools (including information about using <b>CMake</b> and building "by
     52 hand") in the text file called
     53 <a href="NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD.txt"><b>NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD</b>.</a>
     54 You should consult this file as well as the
     55 <a href="README.txt"><b>README</b></a>
     56 file if you are building in a non-Unix-like environment.
     57 </P>
     58 <br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">PCRE BUILD-TIME OPTIONS</a><br>
     59 <P>
     60 The rest of this document describes the optional features of PCRE that can be
     61 selected when the library is compiled. It assumes use of the <b>configure</b>
     62 script, where the optional features are selected or deselected by providing
     63 options to <b>configure</b> before running the <b>make</b> command. However, the
     64 same options can be selected in both Unix-like and non-Unix-like environments
     65 using the GUI facility of <b>cmake-gui</b> if you are using <b>CMake</b> instead
     66 of <b>configure</b> to build PCRE.
     67 </P>
     68 <P>
     69 If you are not using Autotools or <b>CMake</b>, option selection can be done by
     70 editing the <b>config.h</b> file, or by passing parameter settings to the
     71 compiler, as described in
     72 <a href="NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD.txt"><b>NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD</b>.</a>
     73 </P>
     74 <P>
     75 The complete list of options for <b>configure</b> (which includes the standard
     76 ones such as the selection of the installation directory) can be obtained by
     77 running
     78 <pre>
     79   ./configure --help
     80 </pre>
     81 The following sections include descriptions of options whose names begin with
     82 --enable or --disable. These settings specify changes to the defaults for the
     83 <b>configure</b> command. Because of the way that <b>configure</b> works,
     84 --enable and --disable always come in pairs, so the complementary option always
     85 exists as well, but as it specifies the default, it is not described.
     86 </P>
     87 <br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">BUILDING 8-BIT, 16-BIT AND 32-BIT LIBRARIES</a><br>
     88 <P>
     89 By default, a library called <b>libpcre</b> is built, containing functions that
     90 take string arguments contained in vectors of bytes, either as single-byte
     91 characters, or interpreted as UTF-8 strings. You can also build a separate
     92 library, called <b>libpcre16</b>, in which strings are contained in vectors of
     93 16-bit data units and interpreted either as single-unit characters or UTF-16
     94 strings, by adding
     95 <pre>
     96   --enable-pcre16
     97 </pre>
     98 to the <b>configure</b> command. You can also build yet another separate
     99 library, called <b>libpcre32</b>, in which strings are contained in vectors of
    100 32-bit data units and interpreted either as single-unit characters or UTF-32
    101 strings, by adding
    102 <pre>
    103   --enable-pcre32
    104 </pre>
    105 to the <b>configure</b> command. If you do not want the 8-bit library, add
    106 <pre>
    107   --disable-pcre8
    108 </pre>
    109 as well. At least one of the three libraries must be built. Note that the C++
    110 and POSIX wrappers are for the 8-bit library only, and that <b>pcregrep</b> is
    111 an 8-bit program. None of these are built if you select only the 16-bit or
    112 32-bit libraries.
    113 </P>
    114 <br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">BUILDING SHARED AND STATIC LIBRARIES</a><br>
    115 <P>
    116 The Autotools PCRE building process uses <b>libtool</b> to build both shared and
    117 static libraries by default. You can suppress one of these by adding one of
    118 <pre>
    119   --disable-shared
    120   --disable-static
    121 </pre>
    122 to the <b>configure</b> command, as required.
    123 </P>
    124 <br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">C++ SUPPORT</a><br>
    125 <P>
    126 By default, if the 8-bit library is being built, the <b>configure</b> script
    127 will search for a C++ compiler and C++ header files. If it finds them, it
    128 automatically builds the C++ wrapper library (which supports only 8-bit
    129 strings). You can disable this by adding
    130 <pre>
    131   --disable-cpp
    132 </pre>
    133 to the <b>configure</b> command.
    134 </P>
    135 <br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">UTF-8, UTF-16 AND UTF-32 SUPPORT</a><br>
    136 <P>
    137 To build PCRE with support for UTF Unicode character strings, add
    138 <pre>
    139   --enable-utf
    140 </pre>
    141 to the <b>configure</b> command. This setting applies to all three libraries,
    142 adding support for UTF-8 to the 8-bit library, support for UTF-16 to the 16-bit
    143 library, and support for UTF-32 to the to the 32-bit library. There are no
    144 separate options for enabling UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32 independently because
    145 that would allow ridiculous settings such as requesting UTF-16 support while
    146 building only the 8-bit library. It is not possible to build one library with
    147 UTF support and another without in the same configuration. (For backwards
    148 compatibility, --enable-utf8 is a synonym of --enable-utf.)
    149 </P>
    150 <P>
    151 Of itself, this setting does not make PCRE treat strings as UTF-8, UTF-16 or
    152 UTF-32. As well as compiling PCRE with this option, you also have have to set
    153 the PCRE_UTF8, PCRE_UTF16 or PCRE_UTF32 option (as appropriate) when you call
    154 one of the pattern compiling functions.
    155 </P>
    156 <P>
    157 If you set --enable-utf when compiling in an EBCDIC environment, PCRE expects
    158 its input to be either ASCII or UTF-8 (depending on the run-time option). It is
    159 not possible to support both EBCDIC and UTF-8 codes in the same version of the
    160 library. Consequently, --enable-utf and --enable-ebcdic are mutually
    161 exclusive.
    162 </P>
    163 <br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">UNICODE CHARACTER PROPERTY SUPPORT</a><br>
    164 <P>
    165 UTF support allows the libraries to process character codepoints up to 0x10ffff
    166 in the strings that they handle. On its own, however, it does not provide any
    167 facilities for accessing the properties of such characters. If you want to be
    168 able to use the pattern escapes \P, \p, and \X, which refer to Unicode
    169 character properties, you must add
    170 <pre>
    171   --enable-unicode-properties
    172 </pre>
    173 to the <b>configure</b> command. This implies UTF support, even if you have
    174 not explicitly requested it.
    175 </P>
    176 <P>
    177 Including Unicode property support adds around 30K of tables to the PCRE
    178 library. Only the general category properties such as <i>Lu</i> and <i>Nd</i> are
    179 supported. Details are given in the
    180 <a href="pcrepattern.html"><b>pcrepattern</b></a>
    181 documentation.
    182 </P>
    183 <br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">JUST-IN-TIME COMPILER SUPPORT</a><br>
    184 <P>
    185 Just-in-time compiler support is included in the build by specifying
    186 <pre>
    187   --enable-jit
    188 </pre>
    189 This support is available only for certain hardware architectures. If this
    190 option is set for an unsupported architecture, a compile time error occurs.
    191 See the
    192 <a href="pcrejit.html"><b>pcrejit</b></a>
    193 documentation for a discussion of JIT usage. When JIT support is enabled,
    194 pcregrep automatically makes use of it, unless you add
    195 <pre>
    196   --disable-pcregrep-jit
    197 </pre>
    198 to the "configure" command.
    199 </P>
    200 <br><a name="SEC9" href="#TOC1">CODE VALUE OF NEWLINE</a><br>
    201 <P>
    202 By default, PCRE interprets the linefeed (LF) character as indicating the end
    203 of a line. This is the normal newline character on Unix-like systems. You can
    204 compile PCRE to use carriage return (CR) instead, by adding
    205 <pre>
    206   --enable-newline-is-cr
    207 </pre>
    208 to the <b>configure</b> command. There is also a --enable-newline-is-lf option,
    209 which explicitly specifies linefeed as the newline character.
    210 <br>
    211 <br>
    212 Alternatively, you can specify that line endings are to be indicated by the two
    213 character sequence CRLF. If you want this, add
    214 <pre>
    215   --enable-newline-is-crlf
    216 </pre>
    217 to the <b>configure</b> command. There is a fourth option, specified by
    218 <pre>
    219   --enable-newline-is-anycrlf
    220 </pre>
    221 which causes PCRE to recognize any of the three sequences CR, LF, or CRLF as
    222 indicating a line ending. Finally, a fifth option, specified by
    223 <pre>
    224   --enable-newline-is-any
    225 </pre>
    226 causes PCRE to recognize any Unicode newline sequence.
    227 </P>
    228 <P>
    229 Whatever line ending convention is selected when PCRE is built can be
    230 overridden when the library functions are called. At build time it is
    231 conventional to use the standard for your operating system.
    232 </P>
    233 <br><a name="SEC10" href="#TOC1">WHAT \R MATCHES</a><br>
    234 <P>
    235 By default, the sequence \R in a pattern matches any Unicode newline sequence,
    236 whatever has been selected as the line ending sequence. If you specify
    237 <pre>
    238   --enable-bsr-anycrlf
    239 </pre>
    240 the default is changed so that \R matches only CR, LF, or CRLF. Whatever is
    241 selected when PCRE is built can be overridden when the library functions are
    242 called.
    243 </P>
    244 <br><a name="SEC11" href="#TOC1">POSIX MALLOC USAGE</a><br>
    245 <P>
    246 When the 8-bit library is called through the POSIX interface (see the
    247 <a href="pcreposix.html"><b>pcreposix</b></a>
    248 documentation), additional working storage is required for holding the pointers
    249 to capturing substrings, because PCRE requires three integers per substring,
    250 whereas the POSIX interface provides only two. If the number of expected
    251 substrings is small, the wrapper function uses space on the stack, because this
    252 is faster than using <b>malloc()</b> for each call. The default threshold above
    253 which the stack is no longer used is 10; it can be changed by adding a setting
    254 such as
    255 <pre>
    256   --with-posix-malloc-threshold=20
    257 </pre>
    258 to the <b>configure</b> command.
    259 </P>
    260 <br><a name="SEC12" href="#TOC1">HANDLING VERY LARGE PATTERNS</a><br>
    261 <P>
    262 Within a compiled pattern, offset values are used to point from one part to
    263 another (for example, from an opening parenthesis to an alternation
    264 metacharacter). By default, in the 8-bit and 16-bit libraries, two-byte values
    265 are used for these offsets, leading to a maximum size for a compiled pattern of
    266 around 64K. This is sufficient to handle all but the most gigantic patterns.
    267 Nevertheless, some people do want to process truly enormous patterns, so it is
    268 possible to compile PCRE to use three-byte or four-byte offsets by adding a
    269 setting such as
    270 <pre>
    271   --with-link-size=3
    272 </pre>
    273 to the <b>configure</b> command. The value given must be 2, 3, or 4. For the
    274 16-bit library, a value of 3 is rounded up to 4. In these libraries, using
    275 longer offsets slows down the operation of PCRE because it has to load
    276 additional data when handling them. For the 32-bit library the value is always
    277 4 and cannot be overridden; the value of --with-link-size is ignored.
    278 </P>
    279 <br><a name="SEC13" href="#TOC1">AVOIDING EXCESSIVE STACK USAGE</a><br>
    280 <P>
    281 When matching with the <b>pcre_exec()</b> function, PCRE implements backtracking
    282 by making recursive calls to an internal function called <b>match()</b>. In
    283 environments where the size of the stack is limited, this can severely limit
    284 PCRE's operation. (The Unix environment does not usually suffer from this
    285 problem, but it may sometimes be necessary to increase the maximum stack size.
    286 There is a discussion in the
    287 <a href="pcrestack.html"><b>pcrestack</b></a>
    288 documentation.) An alternative approach to recursion that uses memory from the
    289 heap to remember data, instead of using recursive function calls, has been
    290 implemented to work round the problem of limited stack size. If you want to
    291 build a version of PCRE that works this way, add
    292 <pre>
    293   --disable-stack-for-recursion
    294 </pre>
    295 to the <b>configure</b> command. With this configuration, PCRE will use the
    296 <b>pcre_stack_malloc</b> and <b>pcre_stack_free</b> variables to call memory
    297 management functions. By default these point to <b>malloc()</b> and
    298 <b>free()</b>, but you can replace the pointers so that your own functions are
    299 used instead.
    300 </P>
    301 <P>
    302 Separate functions are provided rather than using <b>pcre_malloc</b> and
    303 <b>pcre_free</b> because the usage is very predictable: the block sizes
    304 requested are always the same, and the blocks are always freed in reverse
    305 order. A calling program might be able to implement optimized functions that
    306 perform better than <b>malloc()</b> and <b>free()</b>. PCRE runs noticeably more
    307 slowly when built in this way. This option affects only the <b>pcre_exec()</b>
    308 function; it is not relevant for <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>.
    309 </P>
    310 <br><a name="SEC14" href="#TOC1">LIMITING PCRE RESOURCE USAGE</a><br>
    311 <P>
    312 Internally, PCRE has a function called <b>match()</b>, which it calls repeatedly
    313 (sometimes recursively) when matching a pattern with the <b>pcre_exec()</b>
    314 function. By controlling the maximum number of times this function may be
    315 called during a single matching operation, a limit can be placed on the
    316 resources used by a single call to <b>pcre_exec()</b>. The limit can be changed
    317 at run time, as described in the
    318 <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
    319 documentation. The default is 10 million, but this can be changed by adding a
    320 setting such as
    321 <pre>
    322   --with-match-limit=500000
    323 </pre>
    324 to the <b>configure</b> command. This setting has no effect on the
    325 <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b> matching function.
    326 </P>
    327 <P>
    328 In some environments it is desirable to limit the depth of recursive calls of
    329 <b>match()</b> more strictly than the total number of calls, in order to
    330 restrict the maximum amount of stack (or heap, if --disable-stack-for-recursion
    331 is specified) that is used. A second limit controls this; it defaults to the
    332 value that is set for --with-match-limit, which imposes no additional
    333 constraints. However, you can set a lower limit by adding, for example,
    334 <pre>
    335   --with-match-limit-recursion=10000
    336 </pre>
    337 to the <b>configure</b> command. This value can also be overridden at run time.
    338 </P>
    339 <br><a name="SEC15" href="#TOC1">CREATING CHARACTER TABLES AT BUILD TIME</a><br>
    340 <P>
    341 PCRE uses fixed tables for processing characters whose code values are less
    342 than 256. By default, PCRE is built with a set of tables that are distributed
    343 in the file <i>pcre_chartables.c.dist</i>. These tables are for ASCII codes
    344 only. If you add
    345 <pre>
    346   --enable-rebuild-chartables
    347 </pre>
    348 to the <b>configure</b> command, the distributed tables are no longer used.
    349 Instead, a program called <b>dftables</b> is compiled and run. This outputs the
    350 source for new set of tables, created in the default locale of your C run-time
    351 system. (This method of replacing the tables does not work if you are cross
    352 compiling, because <b>dftables</b> is run on the local host. If you need to
    353 create alternative tables when cross compiling, you will have to do so "by
    354 hand".)
    355 </P>
    356 <br><a name="SEC16" href="#TOC1">USING EBCDIC CODE</a><br>
    357 <P>
    358 PCRE assumes by default that it will run in an environment where the character
    359 code is ASCII (or Unicode, which is a superset of ASCII). This is the case for
    360 most computer operating systems. PCRE can, however, be compiled to run in an
    361 EBCDIC environment by adding
    362 <pre>
    363   --enable-ebcdic
    364 </pre>
    365 to the <b>configure</b> command. This setting implies
    366 --enable-rebuild-chartables. You should only use it if you know that you are in
    367 an EBCDIC environment (for example, an IBM mainframe operating system). The
    368 --enable-ebcdic option is incompatible with --enable-utf.
    369 </P>
    370 <P>
    371 The EBCDIC character that corresponds to an ASCII LF is assumed to have the
    372 value 0x15 by default. However, in some EBCDIC environments, 0x25 is used. In
    373 such an environment you should use
    374 <pre>
    375   --enable-ebcdic-nl25
    376 </pre>
    377 as well as, or instead of, --enable-ebcdic. The EBCDIC character for CR has the
    378 same value as in ASCII, namely, 0x0d. Whichever of 0x15 and 0x25 is <i>not</i>
    379 chosen as LF is made to correspond to the Unicode NEL character (which, in
    380 Unicode, is 0x85).
    381 </P>
    382 <P>
    383 The options that select newline behaviour, such as --enable-newline-is-cr,
    384 and equivalent run-time options, refer to these character values in an EBCDIC
    385 environment.
    386 </P>
    387 <br><a name="SEC17" href="#TOC1">PCREGREP OPTIONS FOR COMPRESSED FILE SUPPORT</a><br>
    388 <P>
    389 By default, <b>pcregrep</b> reads all files as plain text. You can build it so
    390 that it recognizes files whose names end in <b>.gz</b> or <b>.bz2</b>, and reads
    391 them with <b>libz</b> or <b>libbz2</b>, respectively, by adding one or both of
    392 <pre>
    393   --enable-pcregrep-libz
    394   --enable-pcregrep-libbz2
    395 </pre>
    396 to the <b>configure</b> command. These options naturally require that the
    397 relevant libraries are installed on your system. Configuration will fail if
    398 they are not.
    399 </P>
    400 <br><a name="SEC18" href="#TOC1">PCREGREP BUFFER SIZE</a><br>
    401 <P>
    402 <b>pcregrep</b> uses an internal buffer to hold a "window" on the file it is
    403 scanning, in order to be able to output "before" and "after" lines when it
    404 finds a match. The size of the buffer is controlled by a parameter whose
    405 default value is 20K. The buffer itself is three times this size, but because
    406 of the way it is used for holding "before" lines, the longest line that is
    407 guaranteed to be processable is the parameter size. You can change the default
    408 parameter value by adding, for example,
    409 <pre>
    410   --with-pcregrep-bufsize=50K
    411 </pre>
    412 to the <b>configure</b> command. The caller of \fPpcregrep\fP can, however,
    413 override this value by specifying a run-time option.
    414 </P>
    415 <br><a name="SEC19" href="#TOC1">PCRETEST OPTION FOR LIBREADLINE SUPPORT</a><br>
    416 <P>
    417 If you add
    418 <pre>
    419   --enable-pcretest-libreadline
    420 </pre>
    421 to the <b>configure</b> command, <b>pcretest</b> is linked with the
    422 <b>libreadline</b> library, and when its input is from a terminal, it reads it
    423 using the <b>readline()</b> function. This provides line-editing and history
    424 facilities. Note that <b>libreadline</b> is GPL-licensed, so if you distribute a
    425 binary of <b>pcretest</b> linked in this way, there may be licensing issues.
    426 </P>
    427 <P>
    428 Setting this option causes the <b>-lreadline</b> option to be added to the
    429 <b>pcretest</b> build. In many operating environments with a sytem-installed
    430 <b>libreadline</b> this is sufficient. However, in some environments (e.g.
    431 if an unmodified distribution version of readline is in use), some extra
    432 configuration may be necessary. The INSTALL file for <b>libreadline</b> says
    433 this:
    434 <pre>
    435   "Readline uses the termcap functions, but does not link with the
    436   termcap or curses library itself, allowing applications which link
    437   with readline the to choose an appropriate library."
    438 </pre>
    439 If your environment has not been set up so that an appropriate library is
    440 automatically included, you may need to add something like
    441 <pre>
    442   LIBS="-ncurses"
    443 </pre>
    444 immediately before the <b>configure</b> command.
    445 </P>
    446 <br><a name="SEC20" href="#TOC1">DEBUGGING WITH VALGRIND SUPPORT</a><br>
    447 <P>
    448 By adding the
    449 <pre>
    450   --enable-valgrind
    451 </pre>
    452 option to to the <b>configure</b> command, PCRE will use valgrind annotations
    453 to mark certain memory regions as unaddressable. This allows it to detect
    454 invalid memory accesses, and is mostly useful for debugging PCRE itself.
    455 </P>
    456 <br><a name="SEC21" href="#TOC1">CODE COVERAGE REPORTING</a><br>
    457 <P>
    458 If your C compiler is gcc, you can build a version of PCRE that can generate a
    459 code coverage report for its test suite. To enable this, you must install
    460 <b>lcov</b> version 1.6 or above. Then specify
    461 <pre>
    462   --enable-coverage
    463 </pre>
    464 to the <b>configure</b> command and build PCRE in the usual way.
    465 </P>
    466 <P>
    467 Note that using <b>ccache</b> (a caching C compiler) is incompatible with code
    468 coverage reporting. If you have configured <b>ccache</b> to run automatically
    469 on your system, you must set the environment variable
    470 <pre>
    471   CCACHE_DISABLE=1
    472 </pre>
    473 before running <b>make</b> to build PCRE, so that <b>ccache</b> is not used.
    474 </P>
    475 <P>
    476 When --enable-coverage is used, the following addition targets are added to the
    477 <i>Makefile</i>:
    478 <pre>
    479   make coverage
    480 </pre>
    481 This creates a fresh coverage report for the PCRE test suite. It is equivalent
    482 to running "make coverage-reset", "make coverage-baseline", "make check", and
    483 then "make coverage-report".
    484 <pre>
    485   make coverage-reset
    486 </pre>
    487 This zeroes the coverage counters, but does nothing else.
    488 <pre>
    489   make coverage-baseline
    490 </pre>
    491 This captures baseline coverage information.
    492 <pre>
    493   make coverage-report
    494 </pre>
    495 This creates the coverage report.
    496 <pre>
    497   make coverage-clean-report
    498 </pre>
    499 This removes the generated coverage report without cleaning the coverage data
    500 itself.
    501 <pre>
    502   make coverage-clean-data
    503 </pre>
    504 This removes the captured coverage data without removing the coverage files
    505 created at compile time (*.gcno).
    506 <pre>
    507   make coverage-clean
    508 </pre>
    509 This cleans all coverage data including the generated coverage report. For more
    510 information about code coverage, see the <b>gcov</b> and <b>lcov</b>
    511 documentation.
    512 </P>
    513 <br><a name="SEC22" href="#TOC1">SEE ALSO</a><br>
    514 <P>
    515 <b>pcreapi</b>(3), <b>pcre16</b>, <b>pcre32</b>, <b>pcre_config</b>(3).
    516 </P>
    517 <br><a name="SEC23" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
    518 <P>
    519 Philip Hazel
    520 <br>
    521 University Computing Service
    522 <br>
    523 Cambridge CB2 3QH, England.
    524 <br>
    525 </P>
    526 <br><a name="SEC24" href="#TOC1">REVISION</a><br>
    527 <P>
    528 Last updated: 12 May 2013
    529 <br>
    530 Copyright &copy; 1997-2013 University of Cambridge.
    531 <br>
    532 <p>
    533 Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE index page</a>.
    534 </p>
    535