925 lines
		
	
	
		
			43 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			925 lines
		
	
	
		
			43 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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								README file for PCRE2 (Perl-compatible regular expression library)
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								------------------------------------------------------------------
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								PCRE2 is a re-working of the original PCRE1 library to provide an entirely new
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								API. Since its initial release in 2015, there has been further development of
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								the code and it now differs from PCRE1 in more than just the API. There are new
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								features, and the internals have been improved. The original PCRE1 library is
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								now obsolete and no longer maintained. The latest release of PCRE2 is available
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								in .tar.gz, tar.bz2, or .zip form from this GitHub repository:
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								https://github.com/PCRE2Project/pcre2/releases
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								There is a mailing list for discussion about the development of PCRE2 at
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								pcre2-dev@googlegroups.com. You can subscribe by sending an email to
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								pcre2-dev+subscribe@googlegroups.com.
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								You can access the archives and also subscribe or manage your subscription
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								here:
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								https://groups.google.com/g/pcre2-dev
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								Please read the NEWS file if you are upgrading from a previous release. The
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								contents of this README file are:
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								  The PCRE2 APIs
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								  Documentation for PCRE2
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								  Contributions by users of PCRE2
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								  Building PCRE2 on non-Unix-like systems
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								  Building PCRE2 without using autotools
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								  Building PCRE2 using autotools
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								  Retrieving configuration information
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								  Shared libraries
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								  Cross-compiling using autotools
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								  Making new tarballs
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								  Testing PCRE2
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								  Character tables
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								  File manifest
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								The PCRE2 APIs
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								--------------
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								PCRE2 is written in C, and it has its own API. There are three sets of
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								functions, one for the 8-bit library, which processes strings of bytes, one for
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								the 16-bit library, which processes strings of 16-bit values, and one for the
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								32-bit library, which processes strings of 32-bit values. Unlike PCRE1, there
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								are no C++ wrappers.
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								The distribution does contain a set of C wrapper functions for the 8-bit
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								library that are based on the POSIX regular expression API (see the pcre2posix
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								man page). These are built into a library called libpcre2-posix. Note that this
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								just provides a POSIX calling interface to PCRE2; the regular expressions
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								themselves still follow Perl syntax and semantics. The POSIX API is restricted,
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								and does not give full access to all of PCRE2's facilities.
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								The header file for the POSIX-style functions is called pcre2posix.h. The
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								official POSIX name is regex.h, but I did not want to risk possible problems
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								with existing files of that name by distributing it that way. To use PCRE2 with
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								an existing program that uses the POSIX API, pcre2posix.h will have to be
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								renamed or pointed at by a link (or the program modified, of course). See the
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								pcre2posix documentation for more details.
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								Documentation for PCRE2
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								-----------------------
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								If you install PCRE2 in the normal way on a Unix-like system, you will end up
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								with a set of man pages whose names all start with "pcre2". The one that is
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								just called "pcre2" lists all the others. In addition to these man pages, the
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								PCRE2 documentation is supplied in two other forms:
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								  1. There are files called doc/pcre2.txt, doc/pcre2grep.txt, and
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								     doc/pcre2test.txt in the source distribution. The first of these is a
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								     concatenation of the text forms of all the section 3 man pages except the
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								     listing of pcre2demo.c and those that summarize individual functions. The
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								     other two are the text forms of the section 1 man pages for the pcre2grep
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								     and pcre2test commands. These text forms are provided for ease of scanning
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								     with text editors or similar tools. They are installed in
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								     <prefix>/share/doc/pcre2, where <prefix> is the installation prefix
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								     (defaulting to /usr/local).
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								  2. A set of files containing all the documentation in HTML form, hyperlinked
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								     in various ways, and rooted in a file called index.html, is distributed in
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								     doc/html and installed in <prefix>/share/doc/pcre2/html.
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								Building PCRE2 on non-Unix-like systems
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								---------------------------------------
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								For a non-Unix-like system, please read the file NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD, though if
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								your system supports the use of "configure" and "make" you may be able to build
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								PCRE2 using autotools in the same way as for many Unix-like systems.
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								PCRE2 can also be configured using CMake, which can be run in various ways
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								(command line, GUI, etc). This creates Makefiles, solution files, etc. The file
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								NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD has information about CMake.
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								PCRE2 has been compiled on many different operating systems. It should be
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								straightforward to build PCRE2 on any system that has a Standard C compiler and
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								library, because it uses only Standard C functions.
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								Building PCRE2 without using autotools
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								--------------------------------------
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								The use of autotools (in particular, libtool) is problematic in some
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								environments, even some that are Unix or Unix-like. See the NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD
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								file for ways of building PCRE2 without using autotools.
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								Building PCRE2 using autotools
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								------------------------------
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								The following instructions assume the use of the widely used "configure; make;
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								make install" (autotools) process.
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								If you have downloaded and unpacked a PCRE2 release tarball, run the
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								"configure" command from the PCRE2 directory, with your current directory set
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								to the directory where you want the files to be created. This command is a
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								standard GNU "autoconf" configuration script, for which generic instructions
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								are supplied in the file INSTALL.
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								The files in the GitHub repository do not contain "configure". If you have
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								downloaded the PCRE2 source files from GitHub, before you can run "configure"
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								you must run the shell script called autogen.sh. This runs a number of
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								autotools to create a "configure" script (you must of course have the autotools
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								commands installed in order to do this).
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								Most commonly, people build PCRE2 within its own distribution directory, and in
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								this case, on many systems, just running "./configure" is sufficient. However,
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								the usual methods of changing standard defaults are available. For example:
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								CFLAGS='-O2 -Wall' ./configure --prefix=/opt/local
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								This command specifies that the C compiler should be run with the flags '-O2
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								-Wall' instead of the default, and that "make install" should install PCRE2
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								under /opt/local instead of the default /usr/local.
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								If you want to build in a different directory, just run "configure" with that
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								directory as current. For example, suppose you have unpacked the PCRE2 source
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								into /source/pcre2/pcre2-xxx, but you want to build it in
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								/build/pcre2/pcre2-xxx:
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								cd /build/pcre2/pcre2-xxx
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								/source/pcre2/pcre2-xxx/configure
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								PCRE2 is written in C and is normally compiled as a C library. However, it is
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								possible to build it as a C++ library, though the provided building apparatus
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								does not have any features to support this.
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								There are some optional features that can be included or omitted from the PCRE2
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								library. They are also documented in the pcre2build man page.
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								. By default, both shared and static libraries are built. You can change this
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								  by adding one of these options to the "configure" command:
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								  --disable-shared
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								  --disable-static
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								  (See also "Shared libraries on Unix-like systems" below.)
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								. By default, only the 8-bit library is built. If you add --enable-pcre2-16 to
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								  the "configure" command, the 16-bit library is also built. If you add
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								  --enable-pcre2-32 to the "configure" command, the 32-bit library is also
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								  built. If you want only the 16-bit or 32-bit library, use --disable-pcre2-8
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								  to disable building the 8-bit library.
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								. If you want to include support for just-in-time (JIT) compiling, which can
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								  give large performance improvements on certain platforms, add --enable-jit to
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								  the "configure" command. This support is available only for certain hardware
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								  architectures. If you try to enable it on an unsupported architecture, there
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								  will be a compile time error. If in doubt, use --enable-jit=auto, which
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								  enables JIT only if the current hardware is supported.
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								. If you are enabling JIT under SELinux environment you may also want to add
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								  --enable-jit-sealloc, which enables the use of an executable memory allocator
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								  that is compatible with SELinux. Warning: this allocator is experimental!
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								  It does not support fork() operation and may crash when no disk space is
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								  available. This option has no effect if JIT is disabled.
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								. If you do not want to make use of the default support for UTF-8 Unicode
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								  character strings in the 8-bit library, UTF-16 Unicode character strings in
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								  the 16-bit library, or UTF-32 Unicode character strings in the 32-bit
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								  library, you can add --disable-unicode to the "configure" command. This
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								  reduces the size of the libraries. It is not possible to configure one
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								  library with Unicode support, and another without, in the same configuration.
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								  It is also not possible to use --enable-ebcdic (see below) with Unicode
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								  support, so if this option is set, you must also use --disable-unicode.
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								  When Unicode support is available, the use of a UTF encoding still has to be
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								  enabled by setting the PCRE2_UTF option at run time or starting a pattern
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								  with (*UTF). When PCRE2 is compiled with Unicode support, its input can only
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								  either be ASCII or UTF-8/16/32, even when running on EBCDIC platforms.
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								  As well as supporting UTF strings, Unicode support includes support for the
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								  \P, \p, and \X sequences that recognize Unicode character properties.
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								  However, only a subset of Unicode properties are supported; see the
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								  pcre2pattern man page for details. Escape sequences such as \d and \w in
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								  patterns do not by default make use of Unicode properties, but can be made to
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								  do so by setting the PCRE2_UCP option or starting a pattern with (*UCP).
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								. You can build PCRE2 to recognize either CR or LF or the sequence CRLF, or any
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								  of the preceding, or any of the Unicode newline sequences, or the NUL (zero)
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								  character as indicating the end of a line. Whatever you specify at build time
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								  is the default; the caller of PCRE2 can change the selection at run time. The
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								  default newline indicator is a single LF character (the Unix standard). You
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								  can specify the default newline indicator by adding --enable-newline-is-cr,
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								  --enable-newline-is-lf, --enable-newline-is-crlf,
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								  --enable-newline-is-anycrlf, --enable-newline-is-any, or
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								  --enable-newline-is-nul to the "configure" command, respectively.
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								. By default, the sequence \R in a pattern matches any Unicode line ending
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								  sequence. This is independent of the option specifying what PCRE2 considers
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								  to be the end of a line (see above). However, the caller of PCRE2 can
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								  restrict \R to match only CR, LF, or CRLF. You can make this the default by
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								  adding --enable-bsr-anycrlf to the "configure" command (bsr = "backslash R").
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								. In a pattern, the escape sequence \C matches a single code unit, even in a
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								  UTF mode. This can be dangerous because it breaks up multi-code-unit
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								  characters. You can build PCRE2 with the use of \C permanently locked out by
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								  adding --enable-never-backslash-C (note the upper case C) to the "configure"
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								  command. When \C is allowed by the library, individual applications can lock
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								  it out by calling pcre2_compile() with the PCRE2_NEVER_BACKSLASH_C option.
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								. PCRE2 has a counter that limits the depth of nesting of parentheses in a
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								  pattern. This limits the amount of system stack that a pattern uses when it
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								  is compiled. The default is 250, but you can change it by setting, for
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								  example,
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								  --with-parens-nest-limit=500
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								. PCRE2 has a counter that can be set to limit the amount of computing resource
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								  it uses when matching a pattern. If the limit is exceeded during a match, the
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								  match fails. The default is ten million. You can change the default by
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								  setting, for example,
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| 
								 | 
							
								  --with-match-limit=500000
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  on the "configure" command. This is just the default; individual calls to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2_match() or pcre2_dfa_match() can supply their own value. There is more
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  discussion in the pcre2api man page (search for pcre2_set_match_limit).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. There is a separate counter that limits the depth of nested backtracking
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  (pcre2_match()) or nested function calls (pcre2_dfa_match()) during a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  matching process, which indirectly limits the amount of heap memory that is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  used, and in the case of pcre2_dfa_match() the amount of stack as well. This
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  counter also has a default of ten million, which is essentially "unlimited".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  You can change the default by setting, for example,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --with-match-limit-depth=5000
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  There is more discussion in the pcre2api man page (search for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2_set_depth_limit).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. You can also set an explicit limit on the amount of heap memory used by
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  the pcre2_match() and pcre2_dfa_match() interpreters:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --with-heap-limit=500
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  The units are kibibytes (units of 1024 bytes). This limit does not apply when
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  the JIT optimization (which has its own memory control features) is used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  There is more discussion on the pcre2api man page (search for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2_set_heap_limit).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. In the 8-bit library, the default maximum compiled pattern size is around
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  64 kibibytes. You can increase this by adding --with-link-size=3 to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  "configure" command. PCRE2 then uses three bytes instead of two for offsets
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  to different parts of the compiled pattern. In the 16-bit library,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --with-link-size=3 is the same as --with-link-size=4, which (in both
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  libraries) uses four-byte offsets. Increasing the internal link size reduces
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  performance in the 8-bit and 16-bit libraries. In the 32-bit library, the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  link size setting is ignored, as 4-byte offsets are always used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. For speed, PCRE2 uses four tables for manipulating and identifying characters
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  whose code point values are less than 256. By default, it uses a set of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  tables for ASCII encoding that is part of the distribution. If you specify
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --enable-rebuild-chartables
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  a program called pcre2_dftables is compiled and run in the default C locale
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  when you obey "make". It builds a source file called pcre2_chartables.c. If
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  you do not specify this option, pcre2_chartables.c is created as a copy of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2_chartables.c.dist. See "Character tables" below for further
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  information.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. It is possible to compile PCRE2 for use on systems that use EBCDIC as their
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  character code (as opposed to ASCII/Unicode) by specifying
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --enable-ebcdic --disable-unicode
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  This automatically implies --enable-rebuild-chartables (see above). However,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  when PCRE2 is built this way, it always operates in EBCDIC. It cannot support
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  both EBCDIC and UTF-8/16/32. There is a second option, --enable-ebcdic-nl25,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  which specifies that the code value for the EBCDIC NL character is 0x25
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  instead of the default 0x15.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. If you specify --enable-debug, additional debugging code is included in the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  build. This option is intended for use by the PCRE2 maintainers.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. In environments where valgrind is installed, if you specify
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --enable-valgrind
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  PCRE2 will use valgrind annotations to mark certain memory regions as
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  unaddressable. This allows it to detect invalid memory accesses, and is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  mostly useful for debugging PCRE2 itself.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. In environments where the gcc compiler is used and lcov is installed, if you
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  specify
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --enable-coverage
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  the build process implements a code coverage report for the test suite. The
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  report is generated by running "make coverage". If ccache is installed on
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  your system, it must be disabled when building PCRE2 for coverage reporting.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  You can do this by setting the environment variable CCACHE_DISABLE=1 before
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  running "make" to build PCRE2. There is more information about coverage
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  reporting in the "pcre2build" documentation.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. When JIT support is enabled, pcre2grep automatically makes use of it, unless
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  you add --disable-pcre2grep-jit to the "configure" command.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. There is support for calling external programs during matching in the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2grep command, using PCRE2's callout facility with string arguments. This
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  support can be disabled by adding --disable-pcre2grep-callout to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  "configure" command. There are two kinds of callout: one that generates
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  output from inbuilt code, and another that calls an external program. The
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  latter has special support for Windows and VMS; otherwise it assumes the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  existence of the fork() function. This facility can be disabled by adding
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --disable-pcre2grep-callout-fork to the "configure" command.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. The pcre2grep program currently supports only 8-bit data files, and so
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  requires the 8-bit PCRE2 library. It is possible to compile pcre2grep to use
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  libz and/or libbz2, in order to read .gz and .bz2 files (respectively), by
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  specifying one or both of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --enable-pcre2grep-libz
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --enable-pcre2grep-libbz2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Of course, the relevant libraries must be installed on your system.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. The default starting size (in bytes) of the internal buffer used by pcre2grep
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  can be set by, for example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --with-pcre2grep-bufsize=51200
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  The value must be a plain integer. The default is 20480. The amount of memory
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  used by pcre2grep is actually three times this number, to allow for "before"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  and "after" lines. If very long lines are encountered, the buffer is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  automatically enlarged, up to a fixed maximum size.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. The default maximum size of pcre2grep's internal buffer can be set by, for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --with-pcre2grep-max-bufsize=2097152
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  The default is either 1048576 or the value of --with-pcre2grep-bufsize,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  whichever is the larger.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. It is possible to compile pcre2test so that it links with the libreadline
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  or libedit libraries, by specifying, respectively,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --enable-pcre2test-libreadline or --enable-pcre2test-libedit
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  If this is done, when pcre2test's input is from a terminal, it reads it using
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  the readline() function. This provides line-editing and history facilities.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Note that libreadline is GPL-licenced, so if you distribute a binary of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2test linked in this way, there may be licensing issues. These can be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  avoided by linking with libedit (which has a BSD licence) instead.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Enabling libreadline causes the -lreadline option to be added to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2test build. In many operating environments with a sytem-installed
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  readline library this is sufficient. However, in some environments (e.g. if
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  an unmodified distribution version of readline is in use), it may be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  necessary to specify something like LIBS="-lncurses" as well. This is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  because, to quote the readline INSTALL, "Readline uses the termcap functions,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  but does not link with the termcap or curses library itself, allowing
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  applications which link with readline the option to choose an appropriate
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  library." If you get error messages about missing functions tgetstr, tgetent,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  tputs, tgetflag, or tgoto, this is the problem, and linking with the ncurses
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  library should fix it.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. The C99 standard defines formatting modifiers z and t for size_t and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  ptrdiff_t values, respectively. By default, PCRE2 uses these modifiers in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  environments other than Microsoft Visual Studio versions earlier than 2013
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  when __STDC_VERSION__ is defined and has a value greater than or equal to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  199901L (indicating C99). However, there is at least one environment that
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  claims to be C99 but does not support these modifiers. If
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  --disable-percent-zt is specified, no use is made of the z or t modifiers.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Instead of %td or %zu, %lu is used, with a cast for size_t values.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. There is a special option called --enable-fuzz-support for use by people who
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  want to run fuzzing tests on PCRE2. At present this applies only to the 8-bit
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  library. If set, it causes an extra library called libpcre2-fuzzsupport.a to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  be built, but not installed. This contains a single function called
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput() whose arguments are a pointer to a string and the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  length of the string. When called, this function tries to compile the string
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  as a pattern, and if that succeeds, to match it. This is done both with no
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  options and with some random options bits that are generated from the string.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Setting --enable-fuzz-support also causes a binary called pcre2fuzzcheck to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  be created. This is normally run under valgrind or used when PCRE2 is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  compiled with address sanitizing enabled. It calls the fuzzing function and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  outputs information about what it is doing. The input strings are specified
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  by arguments: if an argument starts with "=" the rest of it is a literal
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  input string. Otherwise, it is assumed to be a file name, and the contents
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  of the file are the test string.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. Releases before 10.30 could be compiled with --disable-stack-for-recursion,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  which caused pcre2_match() to use individual blocks on the heap for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  backtracking instead of recursive function calls (which use the stack). This
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  is now obsolete because pcre2_match() was refactored always to use the heap
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  (in a much more efficient way than before). This option is retained for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  backwards compatibility, but has no effect other than to output a warning.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The "configure" script builds the following files for the basic C library:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. Makefile             the makefile that builds the library
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. src/config.h         build-time configuration options for the library
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. src/pcre2.h          the public PCRE2 header file
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. pcre2-config         script that shows the building settings such as CFLAGS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                         that were set for "configure"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. libpcre2-8.pc        )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. libpcre2-16.pc       ) data for the pkg-config command
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. libpcre2-32.pc       )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. libpcre2-posix.pc    )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								. libtool              script that builds shared and/or static libraries
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Versions of config.h and pcre2.h are distributed in the src directory of PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								tarballs under the names config.h.generic and pcre2.h.generic. These are
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								provided for those who have to build PCRE2 without using "configure" or CMake.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								If you use "configure" or CMake, the .generic versions are not used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The "configure" script also creates config.status, which is an executable
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								script that can be run to recreate the configuration, and config.log, which
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								contains compiler output from tests that "configure" runs.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Once "configure" has run, you can run "make". This builds whichever of the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								libraries libpcre2-8, libpcre2-16 and libpcre2-32 are configured, and a test
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								program called pcre2test. If you enabled JIT support with --enable-jit, another
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								test program called pcre2_jit_test is built as well. If the 8-bit library is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								built, libpcre2-posix, pcre2posix_test, and the pcre2grep command are also
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								built. Running "make" with the -j option may speed up compilation on
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								multiprocessor systems.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The command "make check" runs all the appropriate tests. Details of the PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								tests are given below in a separate section of this document. The -j option of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								"make" can also be used when running the tests.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								You can use "make install" to install PCRE2 into live directories on your
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								system. The following are installed (file names are all relative to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								<prefix> that is set when "configure" is run):
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Commands (bin):
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2test
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2grep (if 8-bit support is enabled)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2-config
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Libraries (lib):
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    libpcre2-8      (if 8-bit support is enabled)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    libpcre2-16     (if 16-bit support is enabled)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    libpcre2-32     (if 32-bit support is enabled)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    libpcre2-posix  (if 8-bit support is enabled)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Configuration information (lib/pkgconfig):
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    libpcre2-8.pc
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    libpcre2-16.pc
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    libpcre2-32.pc
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    libpcre2-posix.pc
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Header files (include):
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2.h
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2posix.h
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Man pages (share/man/man{1,3}):
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2grep.1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2test.1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2-config.1
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2.3
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2*.3 (lots more pages, all starting "pcre2")
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  HTML documentation (share/doc/pcre2/html):
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    index.html
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    *.html (lots more pages, hyperlinked from index.html)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Text file documentation (share/doc/pcre2):
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    AUTHORS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    COPYING
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    ChangeLog
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    LICENCE
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    NEWS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    README
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2.txt         (a concatenation of the man(3) pages)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2test.txt     the pcre2test man page
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2grep.txt     the pcre2grep man page
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    pcre2-config.txt  the pcre2-config man page
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								If you want to remove PCRE2 from your system, you can run "make uninstall".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								This removes all the files that "make install" installed. However, it does not
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								remove any directories, because these are often shared with other programs.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Retrieving configuration information
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								------------------------------------
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Running "make install" installs the command pcre2-config, which can be used to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								recall information about the PCRE2 configuration and installation. For example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2-config --version
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								prints the version number, and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2-config --libs8
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								outputs information about where the 8-bit library is installed. This command
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								can be included in makefiles for programs that use PCRE2, saving the programmer
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								from having to remember too many details. Run pcre2-config with no arguments to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								obtain a list of possible arguments.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The pkg-config command is another system for saving and retrieving information
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								about installed libraries. Instead of separate commands for each library, a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								single command is used. For example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pkg-config --libs libpcre2-16
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The data is held in *.pc files that are installed in a directory called
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								<prefix>/lib/pkgconfig.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Shared libraries
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								----------------
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The default distribution builds PCRE2 as shared libraries and static libraries,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								as long as the operating system supports shared libraries. Shared library
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								support relies on the "libtool" script which is built as part of the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								"configure" process.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The libtool script is used to compile and link both shared and static
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								libraries. They are placed in a subdirectory called .libs when they are newly
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								built. The programs pcre2test and pcre2grep are built to use these uninstalled
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								libraries (by means of wrapper scripts in the case of shared libraries). When
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								you use "make install" to install shared libraries, pcre2grep and pcre2test are
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								automatically re-built to use the newly installed shared libraries before being
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								installed themselves. However, the versions left in the build directory still
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								use the uninstalled libraries.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								To build PCRE2 using static libraries only you must use --disable-shared when
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								configuring it. For example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								./configure --prefix=/usr/gnu --disable-shared
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Then run "make" in the usual way. Similarly, you can use --disable-static to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								build only shared libraries.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Cross-compiling using autotools
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								-------------------------------
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								You can specify CC and CFLAGS in the normal way to the "configure" command, in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								order to cross-compile PCRE2 for some other host. However, you should NOT
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								specify --enable-rebuild-chartables, because if you do, the pcre2_dftables.c
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								source file is compiled and run on the local host, in order to generate the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								inbuilt character tables (the pcre2_chartables.c file). This will probably not
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								work, because pcre2_dftables.c needs to be compiled with the local compiler,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								not the cross compiler.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								When --enable-rebuild-chartables is not specified, pcre2_chartables.c is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								created by making a copy of pcre2_chartables.c.dist, which is a default set of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								tables that assumes ASCII code. Cross-compiling with the default tables should
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								not be a problem.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								If you need to modify the character tables when cross-compiling, you should
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								move pcre2_chartables.c.dist out of the way, then compile pcre2_dftables.c by
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								hand and run it on the local host to make a new version of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								pcre2_chartables.c.dist. See the pcre2build section "Creating character tables
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								at build time" for more details.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Making new tarballs
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								-------------------
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The command "make dist" creates three PCRE2 tarballs, in tar.gz, tar.bz2, and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								zip formats. The command "make distcheck" does the same, but then does a trial
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								build of the new distribution to ensure that it works.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								If you have modified any of the man page sources in the doc directory, you
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								should first run the PrepareRelease script before making a distribution. This
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								script creates the .txt and HTML forms of the documentation from the man pages.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Testing PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								-------------
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								To test the basic PCRE2 library on a Unix-like system, run the RunTest script.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								There is another script called RunGrepTest that tests the pcre2grep command.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								When the 8-bit library is built, a test program for the POSIX wrapper, called
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								pcre2posix_test, is compiled, and when JIT support is enabled, a test program
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								called pcre2_jit_test is built. The scripts and the program tests are all run
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								when you obey "make check". For other environments, see the instructions in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The RunTest script runs the pcre2test test program (which is documented in its
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								own man page) on each of the relevant testinput files in the testdata
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								directory, and compares the output with the contents of the corresponding
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								testoutput files. RunTest uses a file called testtry to hold the main output
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								from pcre2test. Other files whose names begin with "test" are used as working
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								files in some tests.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Some tests are relevant only when certain build-time options were selected. For
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								example, the tests for UTF-8/16/32 features are run only when Unicode support
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								is available. RunTest outputs a comment when it skips a test.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Many (but not all) of the tests that are not skipped are run twice if JIT
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								support is available. On the second run, JIT compilation is forced. This
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								testing can be suppressed by putting "-nojit" on the RunTest command line.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The entire set of tests is run once for each of the 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								libraries that are enabled. If you want to run just one set of tests, call
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								RunTest with either the -8, -16 or -32 option.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								If valgrind is installed, you can run the tests under it by putting "-valgrind"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								on the RunTest command line. To run pcre2test on just one or more specific test
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								files, give their numbers as arguments to RunTest, for example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  RunTest 2 7 11
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								You can also specify ranges of tests such as 3-6 or 3- (meaning 3 to the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								end), or a number preceded by ~ to exclude a test. For example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Runtest 3-15 ~10
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								This runs tests 3 to 15, excluding test 10, and just ~13 runs all the tests
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								except test 13. Whatever order the arguments are in, the tests are always run
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								in numerical order.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								You can also call RunTest with the single argument "list" to cause it to output
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								a list of tests.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The test sequence starts with "test 0", which is a special test that has no
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								input file, and whose output is not checked. This is because it will be
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								different on different hardware and with different configurations. The test
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								exists in order to exercise some of pcre2test's code that would not otherwise
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								be run.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Tests 1 and 2 can always be run, as they expect only plain text strings (not
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								UTF) and make no use of Unicode properties. The first test file can be fed
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								directly into the perltest.sh script to check that Perl gives the same results.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The only difference you should see is in the first few lines, where the Perl
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								version is given instead of the PCRE2 version. The second set of tests check
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								auxiliary functions, error detection, and run-time flags that are specific to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								PCRE2. It also uses the debugging flags to check some of the internals of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								pcre2_compile().
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								If you build PCRE2 with a locale setting that is not the standard C locale, the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								character tables may be different (see next paragraph). In some cases, this may
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								cause failures in the second set of tests. For example, in a locale where the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								isprint() function yields TRUE for characters in the range 128-255, the use of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								[:isascii:] inside a character class defines a different set of characters, and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								this shows up in this test as a difference in the compiled code, which is being
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								listed for checking. For example, where the comparison test output contains
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								[\x00-\x7f] the test might contain [\x00-\xff], and similarly in some other
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								cases. This is not a bug in PCRE2.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 3 checks pcre2_maketables(), the facility for building a set of character
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								tables for a specific locale and using them instead of the default tables. The
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								script uses the "locale" command to check for the availability of the "fr_FR",
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								"french", or "fr" locale, and uses the first one that it finds. If the "locale"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								command fails, or if its output doesn't include "fr_FR", "french", or "fr" in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								the list of available locales, the third test cannot be run, and a comment is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								output to say why. If running this test produces an error like this:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  ** Failed to set locale "fr_FR"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								it means that the given locale is not available on your system, despite being
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								listed by "locale". This does not mean that PCRE2 is broken. There are three
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								alternative output files for the third test, because three different versions
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								of the French locale have been encountered. The test passes if its output
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								matches any one of them.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Tests 4 and 5 check UTF and Unicode property support, test 4 being compatible
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								with the perltest.sh script, and test 5 checking PCRE2-specific things.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Tests 6 and 7 check the pcre2_dfa_match() alternative matching function, in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								non-UTF mode and UTF-mode with Unicode property support, respectively.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 8 checks some internal offsets and code size features, but it is run only
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								when Unicode support is enabled. The output is different in 8-bit, 16-bit, and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								32-bit modes and for different link sizes, so there are different output files
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								for each mode and link size.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Tests 9 and 10 are run only in 8-bit mode, and tests 11 and 12 are run only in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								16-bit and 32-bit modes. These are tests that generate different output in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								8-bit mode. Each pair are for general cases and Unicode support, respectively.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 13 checks the handling of non-UTF characters greater than 255 by
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								pcre2_dfa_match() in 16-bit and 32-bit modes.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 14 contains some special UTF and UCP tests that give different output for
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								different code unit widths.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 15 contains a number of tests that must not be run with JIT. They check,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								among other non-JIT things, the match-limiting features of the interpretive
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								matcher.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 16 is run only when JIT support is not available. It checks that an
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								attempt to use JIT has the expected behaviour.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 17 is run only when JIT support is available. It checks JIT complete and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								partial modes, match-limiting under JIT, and other JIT-specific features.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Tests 18 and 19 are run only in 8-bit mode. They check the POSIX interface to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								the 8-bit library, without and with Unicode support, respectively.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 20 checks the serialization functions by writing a set of compiled
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								patterns to a file, and then reloading and checking them.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Tests 21 and 22 test \C support when the use of \C is not locked out, without
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								and with UTF support, respectively. Test 23 tests \C when it is locked out.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Tests 24 and 25 test the experimental pattern conversion functions, without and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								with UTF support, respectively.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Test 26 checks Unicode property support using tests that are generated
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								automatically from the Unicode data tables.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Character tables
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								----------------
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								For speed, PCRE2 uses four tables for manipulating and identifying characters
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								whose code point values are less than 256. By default, a set of tables that is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								built into the library is used. The pcre2_maketables() function can be called
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								by an application to create a new set of tables in the current locale. This are
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								passed to PCRE2 by calling pcre2_set_character_tables() to put a pointer into a
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								compile context.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The source file called pcre2_chartables.c contains the default set of tables.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								By default, this is created as a copy of pcre2_chartables.c.dist, which
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								contains tables for ASCII coding. However, if --enable-rebuild-chartables is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								specified for ./configure, a new version of pcre2_chartables.c is built by the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								program pcre2_dftables (compiled from pcre2_dftables.c), which uses the ANSI C
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								character handling functions such as isalnum(), isalpha(), isupper(),
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								islower(), etc. to build the table sources. This means that the default C
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								locale that is set for your system will control the contents of these default
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								tables. You can change the default tables by editing pcre2_chartables.c and
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								then re-building PCRE2. If you do this, you should take care to ensure that the
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								file does not get automatically re-generated. The best way to do this is to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								move pcre2_chartables.c.dist out of the way and replace it with your customized
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								tables.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								When the pcre2_dftables program is run as a result of specifying
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								--enable-rebuild-chartables, it uses the default C locale that is set on your
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								system. It does not pay attention to the LC_xxx environment variables. In other
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								words, it uses the system's default locale rather than whatever the compiling
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								user happens to have set. If you really do want to build a source set of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								character tables in a locale that is specified by the LC_xxx variables, you can
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								run the pcre2_dftables program by hand with the -L option. For example:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  ./pcre2_dftables -L pcre2_chartables.c.special
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The second argument names the file where the source code for the tables is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								written. The first two 256-byte tables provide lower casing and case flipping
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								functions, respectively. The next table consists of a number of 32-byte bit
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								maps which identify certain character classes such as digits, "word"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								characters, white space, etc. These are used when building 32-byte bit maps
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								that represent character classes for code points less than 256. The final
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								256-byte table has bits indicating various character types, as follows:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    1   white space character
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    2   letter
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    4   lower case letter
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    8   decimal digit
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								   16   alphanumeric or '_'
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								You can also specify -b (with or without -L) when running pcre2_dftables. This
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								causes the tables to be written in binary instead of as source code. A set of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								binary tables can be loaded into memory by an application and passed to
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								pcre2_compile() in the same way as tables created dynamically by calling
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								pcre2_maketables(). The tables are just a string of bytes, independent of
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								hardware characteristics such as endianness. This means they can be bundled
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								with an application that runs in different environments, to ensure consistent
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								behaviour.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								See also the pcre2build section "Creating character tables at build time".
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								File manifest
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								-------------
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The distribution should contain the files listed below.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								(A) Source files for the PCRE2 library functions and their headers are found in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    the src directory:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_dftables.c     auxiliary program for building pcre2_chartables.c
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                           when --enable-rebuild-chartables is specified
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_chartables.c.dist  a default set of character tables that assume
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                           ASCII coding; unless --enable-rebuild-chartables is
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                           specified, used by copying to pcre2_chartables.c
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2posix.c         )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_auto_possess.c )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_compile.c      )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_config.c       )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_context.c      )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_convert.c      )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_dfa_match.c    )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_error.c        )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_extuni.c       )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_find_bracket.c )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_jit_compile.c  )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_jit_match.c    ) sources for the functions in the library,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_jit_misc.c     )   and some internal functions that they use
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_maketables.c   )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_match.c        )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_match_data.c   )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_newline.c      )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_ord2utf.c      )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_pattern_info.c )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_script_run.c   )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_serialize.c    )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_string_utils.c )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_study.c        )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_substitute.c   )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_substring.c    )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_tables.c       )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_ucd.c          )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_ucptables.c    )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_valid_utf.c    )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_xclass.c       )
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_printint.c     debugging function that is used by pcre2test,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_fuzzsupport.c  function for (optional) fuzzing support
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/config.h.in          template for config.h, when built by "configure"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2.h.in           template for pcre2.h when built by "configure"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2posix.h         header for the external POSIX wrapper API
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_internal.h     header for internal use
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_intmodedep.h   a mode-specific internal header
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_jit_neon_inc.h header used by JIT
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_jit_simd_inc.h header used by JIT
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_ucp.h          header for Unicode property handling
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  sljit/*                  source files for the JIT compiler
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								(B) Source files for programs that use PCRE2:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2demo.c          simple demonstration of coding calls to PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2grep.c          source of a grep utility that uses PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2test.c          comprehensive test program
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2_jit_test.c     JIT test program
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2posix_test.c    POSIX wrapper API test program
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								(C) Auxiliary files:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  132html                  script to turn "man" pages into HTML
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  AUTHORS                  information about the author of PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  ChangeLog                log of changes to the code
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  CleanTxt                 script to clean nroff output for txt man pages
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Detrail                  script to remove trailing spaces
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  HACKING                  some notes about the internals of PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  INSTALL                  generic installation instructions
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  LICENCE                  conditions for the use of PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  COPYING                  the same, using GNU's standard name
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Makefile.in              ) template for Unix Makefile, which is built by
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                           )   "configure"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  Makefile.am              ) the automake input that was used to create
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                           )   Makefile.in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  NEWS                     important changes in this release
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD      notes on building PCRE2 without using autotools
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  PrepareRelease           script to make preparations for "make dist"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  README                   this file
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  RunTest                  a Unix shell script for running tests
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  RunGrepTest              a Unix shell script for pcre2grep tests
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  aclocal.m4               m4 macros (generated by "aclocal")
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  config.guess             ) files used by libtool,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  config.sub               )   used only when building a shared library
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  configure                a configuring shell script (built by autoconf)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  configure.ac             ) the autoconf input that was used to build
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                           )   "configure" and config.h
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  depcomp                  ) script to find program dependencies, generated by
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                           )   automake
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  doc/*.3                  man page sources for PCRE2
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  doc/*.1                  man page sources for pcre2grep and pcre2test
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  doc/index.html.src       the base HTML page
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  doc/html/*               HTML documentation
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  doc/pcre2.txt            plain text version of the man pages
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  doc/pcre2test.txt        plain text documentation of test program
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  install-sh               a shell script for installing files
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  libpcre2-8.pc.in         template for libpcre2-8.pc for pkg-config
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  libpcre2-16.pc.in        template for libpcre2-16.pc for pkg-config
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  libpcre2-32.pc.in        template for libpcre2-32.pc for pkg-config
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  libpcre2-posix.pc.in     template for libpcre2-posix.pc for pkg-config
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  ltmain.sh                file used to build a libtool script
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  missing                  ) common stub for a few missing GNU programs while
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                           )   installing, generated by automake
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  mkinstalldirs            script for making install directories
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  perltest.sh              Script for running a Perl test program
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  pcre2-config.in          source of script which retains PCRE2 information
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  testdata/testinput*      test data for main library tests
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  testdata/testoutput*     expected test results
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  testdata/grep*           input and output for pcre2grep tests
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  testdata/*               other supporting test files
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								(D) Auxiliary files for cmake support
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  cmake/COPYING-CMAKE-SCRIPTS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  cmake/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  cmake/FindEditline.cmake
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  cmake/FindReadline.cmake
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  CMakeLists.txt
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  config-cmake.h.in
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								(E) Auxiliary files for building PCRE2 "by hand"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/pcre2.h.generic     ) a version of the public PCRE2 header file
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                          )   for use in non-"configure" environments
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  src/config.h.generic    ) a version of config.h for use in non-"configure"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								                          )   environments
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Philip Hazel
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Email local part: Philip.Hazel
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Email domain: gmail.com
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Last updated: 10 December 2022
							 |