1 README file for PCRE (Perl-compatible regular expression library) 2 ----------------------------------------------------------------- 3 4 NOTE: This set of files relates to PCRE releases that use the original API, 5 with library names libpcre, libpcre16, and libpcre32. January 2015 saw the 6 first release of a new API, known as PCRE2, with release numbers starting at 7 10.00 and library names libpcre2-8, libpcre2-16, and libpcre2-32. The old 8 libraries (now called PCRE1) are still being maintained for bug fixes, but 9 there will be no new development. New projects are advised to use the new PCRE2 10 libraries. 11 12 13 The latest release of PCRE1 is always available in three alternative formats 14 from: 15 16 ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/pcre-xxx.tar.gz 17 ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/pcre-xxx.tar.bz2 18 ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/pcre-xxx.zip 19 20 There is a mailing list for discussion about the development of PCRE at 21 pcre-dev (a] exim.org. You can access the archives and subscribe or manage your 22 subscription here: 23 24 https://lists.exim.org/mailman/listinfo/pcre-dev 25 26 Please read the NEWS file if you are upgrading from a previous release. 27 The contents of this README file are: 28 29 The PCRE APIs 30 Documentation for PCRE 31 Contributions by users of PCRE 32 Building PCRE on non-Unix-like systems 33 Building PCRE without using autotools 34 Building PCRE using autotools 35 Retrieving configuration information 36 Shared libraries 37 Cross-compiling using autotools 38 Using HP's ANSI C++ compiler (aCC) 39 Compiling in Tru64 using native compilers 40 Using Sun's compilers for Solaris 41 Using PCRE from MySQL 42 Making new tarballs 43 Testing PCRE 44 Character tables 45 File manifest 46 47 48 The PCRE APIs 49 ------------- 50 51 PCRE is written in C, and it has its own API. There are three sets of 52 functions, one for the 8-bit library, which processes strings of bytes, one for 53 the 16-bit library, which processes strings of 16-bit values, and one for the 54 32-bit library, which processes strings of 32-bit values. The distribution also 55 includes a set of C++ wrapper functions (see the pcrecpp man page for details), 56 courtesy of Google Inc., which can be used to call the 8-bit PCRE library from 57 C++. Other C++ wrappers have been created from time to time. See, for example: 58 https://github.com/YasserAsmi/regexp, which aims to be simple and similar in 59 style to the C API. 60 61 The distribution also contains a set of C wrapper functions (again, just for 62 the 8-bit library) that are based on the POSIX regular expression API (see the 63 pcreposix man page). These end up in the library called libpcreposix. Note that 64 this just provides a POSIX calling interface to PCRE; the regular expressions 65 themselves still follow Perl syntax and semantics. The POSIX API is restricted, 66 and does not give full access to all of PCRE's facilities. 67 68 The header file for the POSIX-style functions is called pcreposix.h. The 69 official POSIX name is regex.h, but I did not want to risk possible problems 70 with existing files of that name by distributing it that way. To use PCRE with 71 an existing program that uses the POSIX API, pcreposix.h will have to be 72 renamed or pointed at by a link. 73 74 If you are using the POSIX interface to PCRE and there is already a POSIX regex 75 library installed on your system, as well as worrying about the regex.h header 76 file (as mentioned above), you must also take care when linking programs to 77 ensure that they link with PCRE's libpcreposix library. Otherwise they may pick 78 up the POSIX functions of the same name from the other library. 79 80 One way of avoiding this confusion is to compile PCRE with the addition of 81 -Dregcomp=PCREregcomp (and similarly for the other POSIX functions) to the 82 compiler flags (CFLAGS if you are using "configure" -- see below). This has the 83 effect of renaming the functions so that the names no longer clash. Of course, 84 you have to do the same thing for your applications, or write them using the 85 new names. 86 87 88 Documentation for PCRE 89 ---------------------- 90 91 If you install PCRE in the normal way on a Unix-like system, you will end up 92 with a set of man pages whose names all start with "pcre". The one that is just 93 called "pcre" lists all the others. In addition to these man pages, the PCRE 94 documentation is supplied in two other forms: 95 96 1. There are files called doc/pcre.txt, doc/pcregrep.txt, and 97 doc/pcretest.txt in the source distribution. The first of these is a 98 concatenation of the text forms of all the section 3 man pages except 99 the listing of pcredemo.c and those that summarize individual functions. 100 The other two are the text forms of the section 1 man pages for the 101 pcregrep and pcretest commands. These text forms are provided for ease of 102 scanning with text editors or similar tools. They are installed in 103 <prefix>/share/doc/pcre, where <prefix> is the installation prefix 104 (defaulting to /usr/local). 105 106 2. A set of files containing all the documentation in HTML form, hyperlinked 107 in various ways, and rooted in a file called index.html, is distributed in 108 doc/html and installed in <prefix>/share/doc/pcre/html. 109 110 Users of PCRE have contributed files containing the documentation for various 111 releases in CHM format. These can be found in the Contrib directory of the FTP 112 site (see next section). 113 114 115 Contributions by users of PCRE 116 ------------------------------ 117 118 You can find contributions from PCRE users in the directory 119 120 ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/Contrib 121 122 There is a README file giving brief descriptions of what they are. Some are 123 complete in themselves; others are pointers to URLs containing relevant files. 124 Some of this material is likely to be well out-of-date. Several of the earlier 125 contributions provided support for compiling PCRE on various flavours of 126 Windows (I myself do not use Windows). Nowadays there is more Windows support 127 in the standard distribution, so these contibutions have been archived. 128 129 A PCRE user maintains downloadable Windows binaries of the pcregrep and 130 pcretest programs here: 131 132 http://www.rexegg.com/pcregrep-pcretest.html 133 134 135 Building PCRE on non-Unix-like systems 136 -------------------------------------- 137 138 For a non-Unix-like system, please read the comments in the file 139 NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD, though if your system supports the use of "configure" and 140 "make" you may be able to build PCRE using autotools in the same way as for 141 many Unix-like systems. 142 143 PCRE can also be configured using the GUI facility provided by CMake's 144 cmake-gui command. This creates Makefiles, solution files, etc. The file 145 NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD has information about CMake. 146 147 PCRE has been compiled on many different operating systems. It should be 148 straightforward to build PCRE on any system that has a Standard C compiler and 149 library, because it uses only Standard C functions. 150 151 152 Building PCRE without using autotools 153 ------------------------------------- 154 155 The use of autotools (in particular, libtool) is problematic in some 156 environments, even some that are Unix or Unix-like. See the NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD 157 file for ways of building PCRE without using autotools. 158 159 160 Building PCRE using autotools 161 ----------------------------- 162 163 If you are using HP's ANSI C++ compiler (aCC), please see the special note 164 in the section entitled "Using HP's ANSI C++ compiler (aCC)" below. 165 166 The following instructions assume the use of the widely used "configure; make; 167 make install" (autotools) process. 168 169 To build PCRE on system that supports autotools, first run the "configure" 170 command from the PCRE distribution directory, with your current directory set 171 to the directory where you want the files to be created. This command is a 172 standard GNU "autoconf" configuration script, for which generic instructions 173 are supplied in the file INSTALL. 174 175 Most commonly, people build PCRE within its own distribution directory, and in 176 this case, on many systems, just running "./configure" is sufficient. However, 177 the usual methods of changing standard defaults are available. For example: 178 179 CFLAGS='-O2 -Wall' ./configure --prefix=/opt/local 180 181 This command specifies that the C compiler should be run with the flags '-O2 182 -Wall' instead of the default, and that "make install" should install PCRE 183 under /opt/local instead of the default /usr/local. 184 185 If you want to build in a different directory, just run "configure" with that 186 directory as current. For example, suppose you have unpacked the PCRE source 187 into /source/pcre/pcre-xxx, but you want to build it in /build/pcre/pcre-xxx: 188 189 cd /build/pcre/pcre-xxx 190 /source/pcre/pcre-xxx/configure 191 192 PCRE is written in C and is normally compiled as a C library. However, it is 193 possible to build it as a C++ library, though the provided building apparatus 194 does not have any features to support this. 195 196 There are some optional features that can be included or omitted from the PCRE 197 library. They are also documented in the pcrebuild man page. 198 199 . By default, both shared and static libraries are built. You can change this 200 by adding one of these options to the "configure" command: 201 202 --disable-shared 203 --disable-static 204 205 (See also "Shared libraries on Unix-like systems" below.) 206 207 . By default, only the 8-bit library is built. If you add --enable-pcre16 to 208 the "configure" command, the 16-bit library is also built. If you add 209 --enable-pcre32 to the "configure" command, the 32-bit library is also built. 210 If you want only the 16-bit or 32-bit library, use --disable-pcre8 to disable 211 building the 8-bit library. 212 213 . If you are building the 8-bit library and want to suppress the building of 214 the C++ wrapper library, you can add --disable-cpp to the "configure" 215 command. Otherwise, when "configure" is run without --disable-pcre8, it will 216 try to find a C++ compiler and C++ header files, and if it succeeds, it will 217 try to build the C++ wrapper. 218 219 . If you want to include support for just-in-time compiling, which can give 220 large performance improvements on certain platforms, add --enable-jit to the 221 "configure" command. This support is available only for certain hardware 222 architectures. If you try to enable it on an unsupported architecture, there 223 will be a compile time error. 224 225 . When JIT support is enabled, pcregrep automatically makes use of it, unless 226 you add --disable-pcregrep-jit to the "configure" command. 227 228 . If you want to make use of the support for UTF-8 Unicode character strings in 229 the 8-bit library, or UTF-16 Unicode character strings in the 16-bit library, 230 or UTF-32 Unicode character strings in the 32-bit library, you must add 231 --enable-utf to the "configure" command. Without it, the code for handling 232 UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-8 is not included in the relevant library. Even 233 when --enable-utf is included, the use of a UTF encoding still has to be 234 enabled by an option at run time. When PCRE is compiled with this option, its 235 input can only either be ASCII or UTF-8/16/32, even when running on EBCDIC 236 platforms. It is not possible to use both --enable-utf and --enable-ebcdic at 237 the same time. 238 239 . There are no separate options for enabling UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32 240 independently because that would allow ridiculous settings such as requesting 241 UTF-16 support while building only the 8-bit library. However, the option 242 --enable-utf8 is retained for backwards compatibility with earlier releases 243 that did not support 16-bit or 32-bit character strings. It is synonymous with 244 --enable-utf. It is not possible to configure one library with UTF support 245 and the other without in the same configuration. 246 247 . If, in addition to support for UTF-8/16/32 character strings, you want to 248 include support for the \P, \p, and \X sequences that recognize Unicode 249 character properties, you must add --enable-unicode-properties to the 250 "configure" command. This adds about 30K to the size of the library (in the 251 form of a property table); only the basic two-letter properties such as Lu 252 are supported. 253 254 . You can build PCRE to recognize either CR or LF or the sequence CRLF or any 255 of the preceding, or any of the Unicode newline sequences as indicating the 256 end of a line. Whatever you specify at build time is the default; the caller 257 of PCRE can change the selection at run time. The default newline indicator 258 is a single LF character (the Unix standard). You can specify the default 259 newline indicator by adding --enable-newline-is-cr or --enable-newline-is-lf 260 or --enable-newline-is-crlf or --enable-newline-is-anycrlf or 261 --enable-newline-is-any to the "configure" command, respectively. 262 263 If you specify --enable-newline-is-cr or --enable-newline-is-crlf, some of 264 the standard tests will fail, because the lines in the test files end with 265 LF. Even if the files are edited to change the line endings, there are likely 266 to be some failures. With --enable-newline-is-anycrlf or 267 --enable-newline-is-any, many tests should succeed, but there may be some 268 failures. 269 270 . By default, the sequence \R in a pattern matches any Unicode line ending 271 sequence. This is independent of the option specifying what PCRE considers to 272 be the end of a line (see above). However, the caller of PCRE can restrict \R 273 to match only CR, LF, or CRLF. You can make this the default by adding 274 --enable-bsr-anycrlf to the "configure" command (bsr = "backslash R"). 275 276 . When called via the POSIX interface, PCRE uses malloc() to get additional 277 storage for processing capturing parentheses if there are more than 10 of 278 them in a pattern. You can increase this threshold by setting, for example, 279 280 --with-posix-malloc-threshold=20 281 282 on the "configure" command. 283 284 . PCRE has a counter that limits the depth of nesting of parentheses in a 285 pattern. This limits the amount of system stack that a pattern uses when it 286 is compiled. The default is 250, but you can change it by setting, for 287 example, 288 289 --with-parens-nest-limit=500 290 291 . PCRE has a counter that can be set to limit the amount of resources it uses 292 when matching a pattern. If the limit is exceeded during a match, the match 293 fails. The default is ten million. You can change the default by setting, for 294 example, 295 296 --with-match-limit=500000 297 298 on the "configure" command. This is just the default; individual calls to 299 pcre_exec() can supply their own value. There is more discussion on the 300 pcreapi man page. 301 302 . There is a separate counter that limits the depth of recursive function calls 303 during a matching process. This also has a default of ten million, which is 304 essentially "unlimited". You can change the default by setting, for example, 305 306 --with-match-limit-recursion=500000 307 308 Recursive function calls use up the runtime stack; running out of stack can 309 cause programs to crash in strange ways. There is a discussion about stack 310 sizes in the pcrestack man page. 311 312 . The default maximum compiled pattern size is around 64K. You can increase 313 this by adding --with-link-size=3 to the "configure" command. In the 8-bit 314 library, PCRE then uses three bytes instead of two for offsets to different 315 parts of the compiled pattern. In the 16-bit library, --with-link-size=3 is 316 the same as --with-link-size=4, which (in both libraries) uses four-byte 317 offsets. Increasing the internal link size reduces performance. In the 32-bit 318 library, the only supported link size is 4. 319 320 . You can build PCRE so that its internal match() function that is called from 321 pcre_exec() does not call itself recursively. Instead, it uses memory blocks 322 obtained from the heap via the special functions pcre_stack_malloc() and 323 pcre_stack_free() to save data that would otherwise be saved on the stack. To 324 build PCRE like this, use 325 326 --disable-stack-for-recursion 327 328 on the "configure" command. PCRE runs more slowly in this mode, but it may be 329 necessary in environments with limited stack sizes. This applies only to the 330 normal execution of the pcre_exec() function; if JIT support is being 331 successfully used, it is not relevant. Equally, it does not apply to 332 pcre_dfa_exec(), which does not use deeply nested recursion. There is a 333 discussion about stack sizes in the pcrestack man page. 334 335 . For speed, PCRE uses four tables for manipulating and identifying characters 336 whose code point values are less than 256. By default, it uses a set of 337 tables for ASCII encoding that is part of the distribution. If you specify 338 339 --enable-rebuild-chartables 340 341 a program called dftables is compiled and run in the default C locale when 342 you obey "make". It builds a source file called pcre_chartables.c. If you do 343 not specify this option, pcre_chartables.c is created as a copy of 344 pcre_chartables.c.dist. See "Character tables" below for further information. 345 346 . It is possible to compile PCRE for use on systems that use EBCDIC as their 347 character code (as opposed to ASCII/Unicode) by specifying 348 349 --enable-ebcdic 350 351 This automatically implies --enable-rebuild-chartables (see above). However, 352 when PCRE is built this way, it always operates in EBCDIC. It cannot support 353 both EBCDIC and UTF-8/16/32. There is a second option, --enable-ebcdic-nl25, 354 which specifies that the code value for the EBCDIC NL character is 0x25 355 instead of the default 0x15. 356 357 . In environments where valgrind is installed, if you specify 358 359 --enable-valgrind 360 361 PCRE will use valgrind annotations to mark certain memory regions as 362 unaddressable. This allows it to detect invalid memory accesses, and is 363 mostly useful for debugging PCRE itself. 364 365 . In environments where the gcc compiler is used and lcov version 1.6 or above 366 is installed, if you specify 367 368 --enable-coverage 369 370 the build process implements a code coverage report for the test suite. The 371 report is generated by running "make coverage". If ccache is installed on 372 your system, it must be disabled when building PCRE for coverage reporting. 373 You can do this by setting the environment variable CCACHE_DISABLE=1 before 374 running "make" to build PCRE. There is more information about coverage 375 reporting in the "pcrebuild" documentation. 376 377 . The pcregrep program currently supports only 8-bit data files, and so 378 requires the 8-bit PCRE library. It is possible to compile pcregrep to use 379 libz and/or libbz2, in order to read .gz and .bz2 files (respectively), by 380 specifying one or both of 381 382 --enable-pcregrep-libz 383 --enable-pcregrep-libbz2 384 385 Of course, the relevant libraries must be installed on your system. 386 387 . The default size (in bytes) of the internal buffer used by pcregrep can be 388 set by, for example: 389 390 --with-pcregrep-bufsize=51200 391 392 The value must be a plain integer. The default is 20480. 393 394 . It is possible to compile pcretest so that it links with the libreadline 395 or libedit libraries, by specifying, respectively, 396 397 --enable-pcretest-libreadline or --enable-pcretest-libedit 398 399 If this is done, when pcretest's input is from a terminal, it reads it using 400 the readline() function. This provides line-editing and history facilities. 401 Note that libreadline is GPL-licenced, so if you distribute a binary of 402 pcretest linked in this way, there may be licensing issues. These can be 403 avoided by linking with libedit (which has a BSD licence) instead. 404 405 Enabling libreadline causes the -lreadline option to be added to the pcretest 406 build. In many operating environments with a sytem-installed readline 407 library this is sufficient. However, in some environments (e.g. if an 408 unmodified distribution version of readline is in use), it may be necessary 409 to specify something like LIBS="-lncurses" as well. This is because, to quote 410 the readline INSTALL, "Readline uses the termcap functions, but does not link 411 with the termcap or curses library itself, allowing applications which link 412 with readline the to choose an appropriate library." If you get error 413 messages about missing functions tgetstr, tgetent, tputs, tgetflag, or tgoto, 414 this is the problem, and linking with the ncurses library should fix it. 415 416 The "configure" script builds the following files for the basic C library: 417 418 . Makefile the makefile that builds the library 419 . config.h build-time configuration options for the library 420 . pcre.h the public PCRE header file 421 . pcre-config script that shows the building settings such as CFLAGS 422 that were set for "configure" 423 . libpcre.pc ) data for the pkg-config command 424 . libpcre16.pc ) 425 . libpcre32.pc ) 426 . libpcreposix.pc ) 427 . libtool script that builds shared and/or static libraries 428 429 Versions of config.h and pcre.h are distributed in the PCRE tarballs under the 430 names config.h.generic and pcre.h.generic. These are provided for those who 431 have to built PCRE without using "configure" or CMake. If you use "configure" 432 or CMake, the .generic versions are not used. 433 434 When building the 8-bit library, if a C++ compiler is found, the following 435 files are also built: 436 437 . libpcrecpp.pc data for the pkg-config command 438 . pcrecpparg.h header file for calling PCRE via the C++ wrapper 439 . pcre_stringpiece.h header for the C++ "stringpiece" functions 440 441 The "configure" script also creates config.status, which is an executable 442 script that can be run to recreate the configuration, and config.log, which 443 contains compiler output from tests that "configure" runs. 444 445 Once "configure" has run, you can run "make". This builds the the libraries 446 libpcre, libpcre16 and/or libpcre32, and a test program called pcretest. If you 447 enabled JIT support with --enable-jit, a test program called pcre_jit_test is 448 built as well. 449 450 If the 8-bit library is built, libpcreposix and the pcregrep command are also 451 built, and if a C++ compiler was found on your system, and you did not disable 452 it with --disable-cpp, "make" builds the C++ wrapper library, which is called 453 libpcrecpp, as well as some test programs called pcrecpp_unittest, 454 pcre_scanner_unittest, and pcre_stringpiece_unittest. 455 456 The command "make check" runs all the appropriate tests. Details of the PCRE 457 tests are given below in a separate section of this document. 458 459 You can use "make install" to install PCRE into live directories on your 460 system. The following are installed (file names are all relative to the 461 <prefix> that is set when "configure" is run): 462 463 Commands (bin): 464 pcretest 465 pcregrep (if 8-bit support is enabled) 466 pcre-config 467 468 Libraries (lib): 469 libpcre16 (if 16-bit support is enabled) 470 libpcre32 (if 32-bit support is enabled) 471 libpcre (if 8-bit support is enabled) 472 libpcreposix (if 8-bit support is enabled) 473 libpcrecpp (if 8-bit and C++ support is enabled) 474 475 Configuration information (lib/pkgconfig): 476 libpcre16.pc 477 libpcre32.pc 478 libpcre.pc 479 libpcreposix.pc 480 libpcrecpp.pc (if C++ support is enabled) 481 482 Header files (include): 483 pcre.h 484 pcreposix.h 485 pcre_scanner.h ) 486 pcre_stringpiece.h ) if C++ support is enabled 487 pcrecpp.h ) 488 pcrecpparg.h ) 489 490 Man pages (share/man/man{1,3}): 491 pcregrep.1 492 pcretest.1 493 pcre-config.1 494 pcre.3 495 pcre*.3 (lots more pages, all starting "pcre") 496 497 HTML documentation (share/doc/pcre/html): 498 index.html 499 *.html (lots more pages, hyperlinked from index.html) 500 501 Text file documentation (share/doc/pcre): 502 AUTHORS 503 COPYING 504 ChangeLog 505 LICENCE 506 NEWS 507 README 508 pcre.txt (a concatenation of the man(3) pages) 509 pcretest.txt the pcretest man page 510 pcregrep.txt the pcregrep man page 511 pcre-config.txt the pcre-config man page 512 513 If you want to remove PCRE from your system, you can run "make uninstall". 514 This removes all the files that "make install" installed. However, it does not 515 remove any directories, because these are often shared with other programs. 516 517 518 Retrieving configuration information 519 ------------------------------------ 520 521 Running "make install" installs the command pcre-config, which can be used to 522 recall information about the PCRE configuration and installation. For example: 523 524 pcre-config --version 525 526 prints the version number, and 527 528 pcre-config --libs 529 530 outputs information about where the library is installed. This command can be 531 included in makefiles for programs that use PCRE, saving the programmer from 532 having to remember too many details. 533 534 The pkg-config command is another system for saving and retrieving information 535 about installed libraries. Instead of separate commands for each library, a 536 single command is used. For example: 537 538 pkg-config --cflags pcre 539 540 The data is held in *.pc files that are installed in a directory called 541 <prefix>/lib/pkgconfig. 542 543 544 Shared libraries 545 ---------------- 546 547 The default distribution builds PCRE as shared libraries and static libraries, 548 as long as the operating system supports shared libraries. Shared library 549 support relies on the "libtool" script which is built as part of the 550 "configure" process. 551 552 The libtool script is used to compile and link both shared and static 553 libraries. They are placed in a subdirectory called .libs when they are newly 554 built. The programs pcretest and pcregrep are built to use these uninstalled 555 libraries (by means of wrapper scripts in the case of shared libraries). When 556 you use "make install" to install shared libraries, pcregrep and pcretest are 557 automatically re-built to use the newly installed shared libraries before being 558 installed themselves. However, the versions left in the build directory still 559 use the uninstalled libraries. 560 561 To build PCRE using static libraries only you must use --disable-shared when 562 configuring it. For example: 563 564 ./configure --prefix=/usr/gnu --disable-shared 565 566 Then run "make" in the usual way. Similarly, you can use --disable-static to 567 build only shared libraries. 568 569 570 Cross-compiling using autotools 571 ------------------------------- 572 573 You can specify CC and CFLAGS in the normal way to the "configure" command, in 574 order to cross-compile PCRE for some other host. However, you should NOT 575 specify --enable-rebuild-chartables, because if you do, the dftables.c source 576 file is compiled and run on the local host, in order to generate the inbuilt 577 character tables (the pcre_chartables.c file). This will probably not work, 578 because dftables.c needs to be compiled with the local compiler, not the cross 579 compiler. 580 581 When --enable-rebuild-chartables is not specified, pcre_chartables.c is created 582 by making a copy of pcre_chartables.c.dist, which is a default set of tables 583 that assumes ASCII code. Cross-compiling with the default tables should not be 584 a problem. 585 586 If you need to modify the character tables when cross-compiling, you should 587 move pcre_chartables.c.dist out of the way, then compile dftables.c by hand and 588 run it on the local host to make a new version of pcre_chartables.c.dist. 589 Then when you cross-compile PCRE this new version of the tables will be used. 590 591 592 Using HP's ANSI C++ compiler (aCC) 593 ---------------------------------- 594 595 Unless C++ support is disabled by specifying the "--disable-cpp" option of the 596 "configure" script, you must include the "-AA" option in the CXXFLAGS 597 environment variable in order for the C++ components to compile correctly. 598 599 Also, note that the aCC compiler on PA-RISC platforms may have a defect whereby 600 needed libraries fail to get included when specifying the "-AA" compiler 601 option. If you experience unresolved symbols when linking the C++ programs, 602 use the workaround of specifying the following environment variable prior to 603 running the "configure" script: 604 605 CXXLDFLAGS="-lstd_v2 -lCsup_v2" 606 607 608 Compiling in Tru64 using native compilers 609 ----------------------------------------- 610 611 The following error may occur when compiling with native compilers in the Tru64 612 operating system: 613 614 CXX libpcrecpp_la-pcrecpp.lo 615 cxx: Error: /usr/lib/cmplrs/cxx/V7.1-006/include/cxx/iosfwd, line 58: #error 616 directive: "cannot include iosfwd -- define __USE_STD_IOSTREAM to 617 override default - see section 7.1.2 of the C++ Using Guide" 618 #error "cannot include iosfwd -- define __USE_STD_IOSTREAM to override default 619 - see section 7.1.2 of the C++ Using Guide" 620 621 This may be followed by other errors, complaining that 'namespace "std" has no 622 member'. The solution to this is to add the line 623 624 #define __USE_STD_IOSTREAM 1 625 626 to the config.h file. 627 628 629 Using Sun's compilers for Solaris 630 --------------------------------- 631 632 A user reports that the following configurations work on Solaris 9 sparcv9 and 633 Solaris 9 x86 (32-bit): 634 635 Solaris 9 sparcv9: ./configure --disable-cpp CC=/bin/cc CFLAGS="-m64 -g" 636 Solaris 9 x86: ./configure --disable-cpp CC=/bin/cc CFLAGS="-g" 637 638 639 Using PCRE from MySQL 640 --------------------- 641 642 On systems where both PCRE and MySQL are installed, it is possible to make use 643 of PCRE from within MySQL, as an alternative to the built-in pattern matching. 644 There is a web page that tells you how to do this: 645 646 http://www.mysqludf.org/lib_mysqludf_preg/index.php 647 648 649 Making new tarballs 650 ------------------- 651 652 The command "make dist" creates three PCRE tarballs, in tar.gz, tar.bz2, and 653 zip formats. The command "make distcheck" does the same, but then does a trial 654 build of the new distribution to ensure that it works. 655 656 If you have modified any of the man page sources in the doc directory, you 657 should first run the PrepareRelease script before making a distribution. This 658 script creates the .txt and HTML forms of the documentation from the man pages. 659 660 661 Testing PCRE 662 ------------ 663 664 To test the basic PCRE library on a Unix-like system, run the RunTest script. 665 There is another script called RunGrepTest that tests the options of the 666 pcregrep command. If the C++ wrapper library is built, three test programs 667 called pcrecpp_unittest, pcre_scanner_unittest, and pcre_stringpiece_unittest 668 are also built. When JIT support is enabled, another test program called 669 pcre_jit_test is built. 670 671 Both the scripts and all the program tests are run if you obey "make check" or 672 "make test". For other environments, see the instructions in 673 NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD. 674 675 The RunTest script runs the pcretest test program (which is documented in its 676 own man page) on each of the relevant testinput files in the testdata 677 directory, and compares the output with the contents of the corresponding 678 testoutput files. RunTest uses a file called testtry to hold the main output 679 from pcretest. Other files whose names begin with "test" are used as working 680 files in some tests. 681 682 Some tests are relevant only when certain build-time options were selected. For 683 example, the tests for UTF-8/16/32 support are run only if --enable-utf was 684 used. RunTest outputs a comment when it skips a test. 685 686 Many of the tests that are not skipped are run up to three times. The second 687 run forces pcre_study() to be called for all patterns except for a few in some 688 tests that are marked "never study" (see the pcretest program for how this is 689 done). If JIT support is available, the non-DFA tests are run a third time, 690 this time with a forced pcre_study() with the PCRE_STUDY_JIT_COMPILE option. 691 This testing can be suppressed by putting "nojit" on the RunTest command line. 692 693 The entire set of tests is run once for each of the 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit 694 libraries that are enabled. If you want to run just one set of tests, call 695 RunTest with either the -8, -16 or -32 option. 696 697 If valgrind is installed, you can run the tests under it by putting "valgrind" 698 on the RunTest command line. To run pcretest on just one or more specific test 699 files, give their numbers as arguments to RunTest, for example: 700 701 RunTest 2 7 11 702 703 You can also specify ranges of tests such as 3-6 or 3- (meaning 3 to the 704 end), or a number preceded by ~ to exclude a test. For example: 705 706 Runtest 3-15 ~10 707 708 This runs tests 3 to 15, excluding test 10, and just ~13 runs all the tests 709 except test 13. Whatever order the arguments are in, the tests are always run 710 in numerical order. 711 712 You can also call RunTest with the single argument "list" to cause it to output 713 a list of tests. 714 715 The first test file can be fed directly into the perltest.pl script to check 716 that Perl gives the same results. The only difference you should see is in the 717 first few lines, where the Perl version is given instead of the PCRE version. 718 719 The second set of tests check pcre_fullinfo(), pcre_study(), 720 pcre_copy_substring(), pcre_get_substring(), pcre_get_substring_list(), error 721 detection, and run-time flags that are specific to PCRE, as well as the POSIX 722 wrapper API. It also uses the debugging flags to check some of the internals of 723 pcre_compile(). 724 725 If you build PCRE with a locale setting that is not the standard C locale, the 726 character tables may be different (see next paragraph). In some cases, this may 727 cause failures in the second set of tests. For example, in a locale where the 728 isprint() function yields TRUE for characters in the range 128-255, the use of 729 [:isascii:] inside a character class defines a different set of characters, and 730 this shows up in this test as a difference in the compiled code, which is being 731 listed for checking. Where the comparison test output contains [\x00-\x7f] the 732 test will contain [\x00-\xff], and similarly in some other cases. This is not a 733 bug in PCRE. 734 735 The third set of tests checks pcre_maketables(), the facility for building a 736 set of character tables for a specific locale and using them instead of the 737 default tables. The tests make use of the "fr_FR" (French) locale. Before 738 running the test, the script checks for the presence of this locale by running 739 the "locale" command. If that command fails, or if it doesn't include "fr_FR" 740 in the list of available locales, the third test cannot be run, and a comment 741 is output to say why. If running this test produces instances of the error 742 743 ** Failed to set locale "fr_FR" 744 745 in the comparison output, it means that locale is not available on your system, 746 despite being listed by "locale". This does not mean that PCRE is broken. 747 748 [If you are trying to run this test on Windows, you may be able to get it to 749 work by changing "fr_FR" to "french" everywhere it occurs. Alternatively, use 750 RunTest.bat. The version of RunTest.bat included with PCRE 7.4 and above uses 751 Windows versions of test 2. More info on using RunTest.bat is included in the 752 document entitled NON-UNIX-USE.] 753 754 The fourth and fifth tests check the UTF-8/16/32 support and error handling and 755 internal UTF features of PCRE that are not relevant to Perl, respectively. The 756 sixth and seventh tests do the same for Unicode character properties support. 757 758 The eighth, ninth, and tenth tests check the pcre_dfa_exec() alternative 759 matching function, in non-UTF-8/16/32 mode, UTF-8/16/32 mode, and UTF-8/16/32 760 mode with Unicode property support, respectively. 761 762 The eleventh test checks some internal offsets and code size features; it is 763 run only when the default "link size" of 2 is set (in other cases the sizes 764 change) and when Unicode property support is enabled. 765 766 The twelfth test is run only when JIT support is available, and the thirteenth 767 test is run only when JIT support is not available. They test some JIT-specific 768 features such as information output from pcretest about JIT compilation. 769 770 The fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth tests are run only in 8-bit mode, and 771 the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth tests are run only in 16/32-bit 772 mode. These are tests that generate different output in the two modes. They are 773 for general cases, UTF-8/16/32 support, and Unicode property support, 774 respectively. 775 776 The twentieth test is run only in 16/32-bit mode. It tests some specific 777 16/32-bit features of the DFA matching engine. 778 779 The twenty-first and twenty-second tests are run only in 16/32-bit mode, when 780 the link size is set to 2 for the 16-bit library. They test reloading 781 pre-compiled patterns. 782 783 The twenty-third and twenty-fourth tests are run only in 16-bit mode. They are 784 for general cases, and UTF-16 support, respectively. 785 786 The twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth tests are run only in 32-bit mode. They are 787 for general cases, and UTF-32 support, respectively. 788 789 790 Character tables 791 ---------------- 792 793 For speed, PCRE uses four tables for manipulating and identifying characters 794 whose code point values are less than 256. The final argument of the 795 pcre_compile() function is a pointer to a block of memory containing the 796 concatenated tables. A call to pcre_maketables() can be used to generate a set 797 of tables in the current locale. If the final argument for pcre_compile() is 798 passed as NULL, a set of default tables that is built into the binary is used. 799 800 The source file called pcre_chartables.c contains the default set of tables. By 801 default, this is created as a copy of pcre_chartables.c.dist, which contains 802 tables for ASCII coding. However, if --enable-rebuild-chartables is specified 803 for ./configure, a different version of pcre_chartables.c is built by the 804 program dftables (compiled from dftables.c), which uses the ANSI C character 805 handling functions such as isalnum(), isalpha(), isupper(), islower(), etc. to 806 build the table sources. This means that the default C locale which is set for 807 your system will control the contents of these default tables. You can change 808 the default tables by editing pcre_chartables.c and then re-building PCRE. If 809 you do this, you should take care to ensure that the file does not get 810 automatically re-generated. The best way to do this is to move 811 pcre_chartables.c.dist out of the way and replace it with your customized 812 tables. 813 814 When the dftables program is run as a result of --enable-rebuild-chartables, 815 it uses the default C locale that is set on your system. It does not pay 816 attention to the LC_xxx environment variables. In other words, it uses the 817 system's default locale rather than whatever the compiling user happens to have 818 set. If you really do want to build a source set of character tables in a 819 locale that is specified by the LC_xxx variables, you can run the dftables 820 program by hand with the -L option. For example: 821 822 ./dftables -L pcre_chartables.c.special 823 824 The first two 256-byte tables provide lower casing and case flipping functions, 825 respectively. The next table consists of three 32-byte bit maps which identify 826 digits, "word" characters, and white space, respectively. These are used when 827 building 32-byte bit maps that represent character classes for code points less 828 than 256. 829 830 The final 256-byte table has bits indicating various character types, as 831 follows: 832 833 1 white space character 834 2 letter 835 4 decimal digit 836 8 hexadecimal digit 837 16 alphanumeric or '_' 838 128 regular expression metacharacter or binary zero 839 840 You should not alter the set of characters that contain the 128 bit, as that 841 will cause PCRE to malfunction. 842 843 844 File manifest 845 ------------- 846 847 The distribution should contain the files listed below. Where a file name is 848 given as pcre[16|32]_xxx it means that there are three files, one with the name 849 pcre_xxx, one with the name pcre16_xx, and a third with the name pcre32_xxx. 850 851 (A) Source files of the PCRE library functions and their headers: 852 853 dftables.c auxiliary program for building pcre_chartables.c 854 when --enable-rebuild-chartables is specified 855 856 pcre_chartables.c.dist a default set of character tables that assume ASCII 857 coding; used, unless --enable-rebuild-chartables is 858 specified, by copying to pcre[16]_chartables.c 859 860 pcreposix.c ) 861 pcre[16|32]_byte_order.c ) 862 pcre[16|32]_compile.c ) 863 pcre[16|32]_config.c ) 864 pcre[16|32]_dfa_exec.c ) 865 pcre[16|32]_exec.c ) 866 pcre[16|32]_fullinfo.c ) 867 pcre[16|32]_get.c ) sources for the functions in the library, 868 pcre[16|32]_globals.c ) and some internal functions that they use 869 pcre[16|32]_jit_compile.c ) 870 pcre[16|32]_maketables.c ) 871 pcre[16|32]_newline.c ) 872 pcre[16|32]_refcount.c ) 873 pcre[16|32]_string_utils.c ) 874 pcre[16|32]_study.c ) 875 pcre[16|32]_tables.c ) 876 pcre[16|32]_ucd.c ) 877 pcre[16|32]_version.c ) 878 pcre[16|32]_xclass.c ) 879 pcre_ord2utf8.c ) 880 pcre_valid_utf8.c ) 881 pcre16_ord2utf16.c ) 882 pcre16_utf16_utils.c ) 883 pcre16_valid_utf16.c ) 884 pcre32_utf32_utils.c ) 885 pcre32_valid_utf32.c ) 886 887 pcre[16|32]_printint.c ) debugging function that is used by pcretest, 888 ) and can also be #included in pcre_compile() 889 890 pcre.h.in template for pcre.h when built by "configure" 891 pcreposix.h header for the external POSIX wrapper API 892 pcre_internal.h header for internal use 893 sljit/* 16 files that make up the JIT compiler 894 ucp.h header for Unicode property handling 895 896 config.h.in template for config.h, which is built by "configure" 897 898 pcrecpp.h public header file for the C++ wrapper 899 pcrecpparg.h.in template for another C++ header file 900 pcre_scanner.h public header file for C++ scanner functions 901 pcrecpp.cc ) 902 pcre_scanner.cc ) source for the C++ wrapper library 903 904 pcre_stringpiece.h.in template for pcre_stringpiece.h, the header for the 905 C++ stringpiece functions 906 pcre_stringpiece.cc source for the C++ stringpiece functions 907 908 (B) Source files for programs that use PCRE: 909 910 pcredemo.c simple demonstration of coding calls to PCRE 911 pcregrep.c source of a grep utility that uses PCRE 912 pcretest.c comprehensive test program 913 914 (C) Auxiliary files: 915 916 132html script to turn "man" pages into HTML 917 AUTHORS information about the author of PCRE 918 ChangeLog log of changes to the code 919 CleanTxt script to clean nroff output for txt man pages 920 Detrail script to remove trailing spaces 921 HACKING some notes about the internals of PCRE 922 INSTALL generic installation instructions 923 LICENCE conditions for the use of PCRE 924 COPYING the same, using GNU's standard name 925 Makefile.in ) template for Unix Makefile, which is built by 926 ) "configure" 927 Makefile.am ) the automake input that was used to create 928 ) Makefile.in 929 NEWS important changes in this release 930 NON-UNIX-USE the previous name for NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD 931 NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD notes on building PCRE without using autotools 932 PrepareRelease script to make preparations for "make dist" 933 README this file 934 RunTest a Unix shell script for running tests 935 RunGrepTest a Unix shell script for pcregrep tests 936 aclocal.m4 m4 macros (generated by "aclocal") 937 config.guess ) files used by libtool, 938 config.sub ) used only when building a shared library 939 configure a configuring shell script (built by autoconf) 940 configure.ac ) the autoconf input that was used to build 941 ) "configure" and config.h 942 depcomp ) script to find program dependencies, generated by 943 ) automake 944 doc/*.3 man page sources for PCRE 945 doc/*.1 man page sources for pcregrep and pcretest 946 doc/index.html.src the base HTML page 947 doc/html/* HTML documentation 948 doc/pcre.txt plain text version of the man pages 949 doc/pcretest.txt plain text documentation of test program 950 doc/perltest.txt plain text documentation of Perl test program 951 install-sh a shell script for installing files 952 libpcre16.pc.in template for libpcre16.pc for pkg-config 953 libpcre32.pc.in template for libpcre32.pc for pkg-config 954 libpcre.pc.in template for libpcre.pc for pkg-config 955 libpcreposix.pc.in template for libpcreposix.pc for pkg-config 956 libpcrecpp.pc.in template for libpcrecpp.pc for pkg-config 957 ltmain.sh file used to build a libtool script 958 missing ) common stub for a few missing GNU programs while 959 ) installing, generated by automake 960 mkinstalldirs script for making install directories 961 perltest.pl Perl test program 962 pcre-config.in source of script which retains PCRE information 963 pcre_jit_test.c test program for the JIT compiler 964 pcrecpp_unittest.cc ) 965 pcre_scanner_unittest.cc ) test programs for the C++ wrapper 966 pcre_stringpiece_unittest.cc ) 967 testdata/testinput* test data for main library tests 968 testdata/testoutput* expected test results 969 testdata/grep* input and output for pcregrep tests 970 testdata/* other supporting test files 971 972 (D) Auxiliary files for cmake support 973 974 cmake/COPYING-CMAKE-SCRIPTS 975 cmake/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake 976 cmake/FindEditline.cmake 977 cmake/FindReadline.cmake 978 CMakeLists.txt 979 config-cmake.h.in 980 981 (E) Auxiliary files for VPASCAL 982 983 makevp.bat 984 makevp_c.txt 985 makevp_l.txt 986 pcregexp.pas 987 988 (F) Auxiliary files for building PCRE "by hand" 989 990 pcre.h.generic ) a version of the public PCRE header file 991 ) for use in non-"configure" environments 992 config.h.generic ) a version of config.h for use in non-"configure" 993 ) environments 994 995 (F) Miscellaneous 996 997 RunTest.bat a script for running tests under Windows 998 999 Philip Hazel 1000 Email local part: ph10 1001 Email domain: cam.ac.uk 1002 Last updated: 10 February 2015 1003