Files
postgresql/src/test/modules/test_regex
Tom Lane 2a0af7fe46 Allow complemented character class escapes within regex brackets.
The complement-class escapes \D, \S, \W are now allowed within
bracket expressions.  There is no semantic difficulty with doing
that, but the rather hokey macro-expansion-based implementation
previously used here couldn't cope.

Also, invent "word" as an allowed character class name, thus "\w"
is now equivalent to "[[:word:]]" outside brackets, or "[:word:]"
within brackets.  POSIX allows such implementation-specific
extensions, and the same name is used in e.g. bash.

One surprising compatibility issue this raises is that constructs
such as "[\w-_]" are now disallowed, as our documentation has always
said they should be: character classes can't be endpoints of a range.
Previously, because \w was just a macro for "[:alnum:]_", such a
construct was read as "[[:alnum:]_-_]", so it was accepted so long as
the character after "-" was numerically greater than or equal to "_".

Some implementation cleanup along the way:

* Remove the lexnest() hack, and in consequence clean up wordchrs()
to not interact with the lexer.

* Fix colorcomplement() to not be O(N^2) in the number of colors
involved.

* Get rid of useless-as-far-as-I-can-see calls of element()
on single-character character element names in brackpart().
element() always maps these to the character itself, and things
would be quite broken if it didn't --- should "[a]" match something
different than "a" does?  Besides, the shortcut path in brackpart()
wasn't doing this anyway, making it even more inconsistent.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2845172.1613674385@sss.pgh.pa.us
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3220564.1613859619@sss.pgh.pa.us
2021-02-25 13:00:40 -05:00
..

test_regex is a module for testing the regular expression package.
It is mostly meant to allow us to absorb Tcl's regex test suite.
Therefore, there are provisions to exercise regex features that
aren't currently exposed at the SQL level by PostgreSQL.

Currently, one function is provided:

test_regex(pattern text, string text, flags text) returns setof text[]

Reports an error if the pattern is an invalid regex.  Otherwise,
the first row of output contains the number of subexpressions,
followed by words reporting set bit(s) in the regex's re_info field.
If the pattern doesn't match the string, that's all.
If the pattern does match, the next row contains the whole match
as the first array element.  If there are parenthesized subexpression(s),
following array elements contain the matches to those subexpressions.
If the "g" (glob) flag is set, then additional row(s) of output similarly
report any additional matches.

The "flags" argument is a string of zero or more single-character
flags that modify the behavior of the regex package or the test
function.  As described in Tcl's reg.test file:

The flag characters are complex and a bit eclectic.  Generally speaking,
lowercase letters are compile options, uppercase are expected re_info
bits, and nonalphabetics are match options, controls for how the test is
run, or testing options.  The one small surprise is that AREs are the
default, and you must explicitly request lesser flavors of RE.  The flags
are as follows.  It is admitted that some are not very mnemonic.

	-	no-op (placeholder)
	0	report indices not actual strings
		(This substitutes for Tcl's -indices switch)
	!	expect partial match, report start position anyway
	%	force small state-set cache in matcher (to test cache replace)
	^	beginning of string is not beginning of line
	$	end of string is not end of line
	*	test is Unicode-specific, needs big character set
	+	provide fake xy equivalence class and ch collating element
		(Note: the equivalence class is implemented, the
		collating element is not; so references to [.ch.] fail)
	,	set REG_PROGRESS (only useful in REG_DEBUG builds)
	.	set REG_DUMP (only useful in REG_DEBUG builds)
	:	set REG_MTRACE (only useful in REG_DEBUG builds)
	;	set REG_FTRACE (only useful in REG_DEBUG builds)

	&	test as both ARE and BRE
		(Not implemented in Postgres, we use separate tests)
	b	BRE
	e	ERE
	a	turn advanced-features bit on (error unless ERE already)
	q	literal string, no metacharacters at all

	g	global match (find all matches)
	i	case-independent matching
	o	("opaque") do not return match locations
	p	newlines are half-magic, excluded from . and [^ only
	w	newlines are half-magic, significant to ^ and $ only
	n	newlines are fully magic, both effects
	x	expanded RE syntax
	t	incomplete-match reporting
	c	canmatch (equivalent to "t0!", in Postgres implementation)
	s	match only at start (REG_BOSONLY)

	A	backslash-_a_lphanumeric seen
	B	ERE/ARE literal-_b_race heuristic used
	E	backslash (_e_scape) seen within []
	H	looka_h_ead constraint seen
	I	_i_mpossible to match
	L	_l_ocale-specific construct seen
	M	unportable (_m_achine-specific) construct seen
	N	RE can match empty (_n_ull) string
	P	non-_P_OSIX construct seen
	Q	{} _q_uantifier seen
	R	back _r_eference seen
	S	POSIX-un_s_pecified syntax seen
	T	prefers shortest (_t_iny)
	U	saw original-POSIX botch: unmatched right paren in ERE (_u_gh)