| #[cfg(feature = "alloc")] |
| use crate::util::search::PatternSet; |
| use crate::{ |
| dfa::search, |
| util::{ |
| empty, |
| prefilter::Prefilter, |
| primitives::{PatternID, StateID}, |
| search::{Anchored, HalfMatch, Input, MatchError}, |
| start, |
| }, |
| }; |
| |
| /// A trait describing the interface of a deterministic finite automaton (DFA). |
| /// |
| /// The complexity of this trait probably means that it's unlikely for others |
| /// to implement it. The primary purpose of the trait is to provide for a way |
| /// of abstracting over different types of DFAs. In this crate, that means |
| /// dense DFAs and sparse DFAs. (Dense DFAs are fast but memory hungry, where |
| /// as sparse DFAs are slower but come with a smaller memory footprint. But |
| /// they otherwise provide exactly equivalent expressive power.) For example, a |
| /// [`dfa::regex::Regex`](crate::dfa::regex::Regex) is generic over this trait. |
| /// |
| /// Normally, a DFA's execution model is very simple. You might have a single |
| /// start state, zero or more final or "match" states and a function that |
| /// transitions from one state to the next given the next byte of input. |
| /// Unfortunately, the interface described by this trait is significantly |
| /// more complicated than this. The complexity has a number of different |
| /// reasons, mostly motivated by performance, functionality or space savings: |
| /// |
| /// * A DFA can search for multiple patterns simultaneously. This |
| /// means extra information is returned when a match occurs. Namely, |
| /// a match is not just an offset, but an offset plus a pattern ID. |
| /// [`Automaton::pattern_len`] returns the number of patterns compiled into |
| /// the DFA, [`Automaton::match_len`] returns the total number of patterns |
| /// that match in a particular state and [`Automaton::match_pattern`] permits |
| /// iterating over the patterns that match in a particular state. |
| /// * A DFA can have multiple start states, and the choice of which start |
| /// state to use depends on the content of the string being searched and |
| /// position of the search, as well as whether the search is an anchored |
| /// search for a specific pattern in the DFA. Moreover, computing the start |
| /// state also depends on whether you're doing a forward or a reverse search. |
| /// [`Automaton::start_state_forward`] and [`Automaton::start_state_reverse`] |
| /// are used to compute the start state for forward and reverse searches, |
| /// respectively. |
| /// * All matches are delayed by one byte to support things like `$` and `\b` |
| /// at the end of a pattern. Therefore, every use of a DFA is required to use |
| /// [`Automaton::next_eoi_state`] |
| /// at the end of the search to compute the final transition. |
| /// * For optimization reasons, some states are treated specially. Every |
| /// state is either special or not, which can be determined via the |
| /// [`Automaton::is_special_state`] method. If it's special, then the state |
| /// must be at least one of a few possible types of states. (Note that some |
| /// types can overlap, for example, a match state can also be an accel state. |
| /// But some types can't. If a state is a dead state, then it can never be any |
| /// other type of state.) Those types are: |
| /// * A dead state. A dead state means the DFA will never enter a match |
| /// state. This can be queried via the [`Automaton::is_dead_state`] method. |
| /// * A quit state. A quit state occurs if the DFA had to stop the search |
| /// prematurely for some reason. This can be queried via the |
| /// [`Automaton::is_quit_state`] method. |
| /// * A match state. A match state occurs when a match is found. When a DFA |
| /// enters a match state, the search may stop immediately (when looking |
| /// for the earliest match), or it may continue to find the leftmost-first |
| /// match. This can be queried via the [`Automaton::is_match_state`] |
| /// method. |
| /// * A start state. A start state is where a search begins. For every |
| /// search, there is exactly one start state that is used, however, a |
| /// DFA may contain many start states. When the search is in a start |
| /// state, it may use a prefilter to quickly skip to candidate matches |
| /// without executing the DFA on every byte. This can be queried via the |
| /// [`Automaton::is_start_state`] method. |
| /// * An accel state. An accel state is a state that is accelerated. |
| /// That is, it is a state where _most_ of its transitions loop back to |
| /// itself and only a small number of transitions lead to other states. |
| /// This kind of state is said to be accelerated because a search routine |
| /// can quickly look for the bytes leading out of the state instead of |
| /// continuing to execute the DFA on each byte. This can be queried via the |
| /// [`Automaton::is_accel_state`] method. And the bytes that lead out of |
| /// the state can be queried via the [`Automaton::accelerator`] method. |
| /// |
| /// There are a number of provided methods on this trait that implement |
| /// efficient searching (for forwards and backwards) with a DFA using |
| /// all of the above features of this trait. In particular, given the |
| /// complexity of all these features, implementing a search routine in |
| /// this trait can be a little subtle. With that said, it is possible to |
| /// somewhat simplify the search routine. For example, handling accelerated |
| /// states is strictly optional, since it is always correct to assume that |
| /// `Automaton::is_accel_state` returns false. However, one complex part of |
| /// writing a search routine using this trait is handling the 1-byte delay of a |
| /// match. That is not optional. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// This trait is not safe to implement so that code may rely on the |
| /// correctness of implementations of this trait to avoid undefined behavior. |
| /// The primary correctness guarantees are: |
| /// |
| /// * `Automaton::start_state` always returns a valid state ID or an error or |
| /// panics. |
| /// * `Automaton::next_state`, when given a valid state ID, always returns |
| /// a valid state ID for all values of `anchored` and `byte`, or otherwise |
| /// panics. |
| /// |
| /// In general, the rest of the methods on `Automaton` need to uphold their |
| /// contracts as well. For example, `Automaton::is_dead` should only returns |
| /// true if the given state ID is actually a dead state. |
| pub unsafe trait Automaton { |
| /// Transitions from the current state to the next state, given the next |
| /// byte of input. |
| /// |
| /// Implementations must guarantee that the returned ID is always a valid |
| /// ID when `current` refers to a valid ID. Moreover, the transition |
| /// function must be defined for all possible values of `input`. |
| /// |
| /// # Panics |
| /// |
| /// If the given ID does not refer to a valid state, then this routine |
| /// may panic but it also may not panic and instead return an invalid ID. |
| /// However, if the caller provides an invalid ID then this must never |
| /// sacrifice memory safety. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This shows a simplistic example for walking a DFA for a given haystack |
| /// by using the `next_state` method. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{dfa::{Automaton, dense}, Input}; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::new(r"[a-z]+r")?; |
| /// let haystack = "bar".as_bytes(); |
| /// |
| /// // The start state is determined by inspecting the position and the |
| /// // initial bytes of the haystack. |
| /// let mut state = dfa.start_state_forward(&Input::new(haystack))?; |
| /// // Walk all the bytes in the haystack. |
| /// for &b in haystack { |
| /// state = dfa.next_state(state, b); |
| /// } |
| /// // Matches are always delayed by 1 byte, so we must explicitly walk the |
| /// // special "EOI" transition at the end of the search. |
| /// state = dfa.next_eoi_state(state); |
| /// assert!(dfa.is_match_state(state)); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn next_state(&self, current: StateID, input: u8) -> StateID; |
| |
| /// Transitions from the current state to the next state, given the next |
| /// byte of input. |
| /// |
| /// Unlike [`Automaton::next_state`], implementations may implement this |
| /// more efficiently by assuming that the `current` state ID is valid. |
| /// Typically, this manifests by eliding bounds checks. |
| /// |
| /// # Safety |
| /// |
| /// Callers of this method must guarantee that `current` refers to a valid |
| /// state ID. If `current` is not a valid state ID for this automaton, then |
| /// calling this routine may result in undefined behavior. |
| /// |
| /// If `current` is valid, then implementations must guarantee that the ID |
| /// returned is valid for all possible values of `input`. |
| unsafe fn next_state_unchecked( |
| &self, |
| current: StateID, |
| input: u8, |
| ) -> StateID; |
| |
| /// Transitions from the current state to the next state for the special |
| /// EOI symbol. |
| /// |
| /// Implementations must guarantee that the returned ID is always a valid |
| /// ID when `current` refers to a valid ID. |
| /// |
| /// This routine must be called at the end of every search in a correct |
| /// implementation of search. Namely, DFAs in this crate delay matches |
| /// by one byte in order to support look-around operators. Thus, after |
| /// reaching the end of a haystack, a search implementation must follow one |
| /// last EOI transition. |
| /// |
| /// It is best to think of EOI as an additional symbol in the alphabet of |
| /// a DFA that is distinct from every other symbol. That is, the alphabet |
| /// of DFAs in this crate has a logical size of 257 instead of 256, where |
| /// 256 corresponds to every possible inhabitant of `u8`. (In practice, the |
| /// physical alphabet size may be smaller because of alphabet compression |
| /// via equivalence classes, but EOI is always represented somehow in the |
| /// alphabet.) |
| /// |
| /// # Panics |
| /// |
| /// If the given ID does not refer to a valid state, then this routine |
| /// may panic but it also may not panic and instead return an invalid ID. |
| /// However, if the caller provides an invalid ID then this must never |
| /// sacrifice memory safety. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This shows a simplistic example for walking a DFA for a given haystack, |
| /// and then finishing the search with the final EOI transition. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{dfa::{Automaton, dense}, Input}; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::new(r"[a-z]+r")?; |
| /// let haystack = "bar".as_bytes(); |
| /// |
| /// // The start state is determined by inspecting the position and the |
| /// // initial bytes of the haystack. |
| /// // |
| /// // The unwrap is OK because we aren't requesting a start state for a |
| /// // specific pattern. |
| /// let mut state = dfa.start_state_forward(&Input::new(haystack))?; |
| /// // Walk all the bytes in the haystack. |
| /// for &b in haystack { |
| /// state = dfa.next_state(state, b); |
| /// } |
| /// // Matches are always delayed by 1 byte, so we must explicitly walk |
| /// // the special "EOI" transition at the end of the search. Without this |
| /// // final transition, the assert below will fail since the DFA will not |
| /// // have entered a match state yet! |
| /// state = dfa.next_eoi_state(state); |
| /// assert!(dfa.is_match_state(state)); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn next_eoi_state(&self, current: StateID) -> StateID; |
| |
| /// Return the ID of the start state for this DFA for the given starting |
| /// configuration. |
| /// |
| /// Unlike typical DFA implementations, the start state for DFAs in this |
| /// crate is dependent on a few different factors: |
| /// |
| /// * The [`Anchored`] mode of the search. Unanchored, anchored and |
| /// anchored searches for a specific [`PatternID`] all use different start |
| /// states. |
| /// * Whether a "look-behind" byte exists. For example, the `^` anchor |
| /// matches if and only if there is no look-behind byte. |
| /// * The specific value of that look-behind byte. For example, a `(?m:^)` |
| /// assertion only matches when there is either no look-behind byte, or |
| /// when the look-behind byte is a line terminator. |
| /// |
| /// The [starting configuration](start::Config) provides the above |
| /// information. |
| /// |
| /// This routine can be used for either forward or reverse searches. |
| /// Although, as a convenience, if you have an [`Input`], then it may |
| /// be more succinct to use [`Automaton::start_state_forward`] or |
| /// [`Automaton::start_state_reverse`]. Note, for example, that the |
| /// convenience routines return a [`MatchError`] on failure where as this |
| /// routine returns a [`StartError`]. |
| /// |
| /// # Errors |
| /// |
| /// This may return a [`StartError`] if the search needs to give up when |
| /// determining the start state (for example, if it sees a "quit" byte). |
| /// This can also return an error if the given configuration contains an |
| /// unsupported [`Anchored`] configuration. |
| fn start_state( |
| &self, |
| config: &start::Config, |
| ) -> Result<StateID, StartError>; |
| |
| /// Return the ID of the start state for this DFA when executing a forward |
| /// search. |
| /// |
| /// This is a convenience routine for calling [`Automaton::start_state`] |
| /// that converts the given [`Input`] to a [start |
| /// configuration](start::Config). Additionally, if an error occurs, it is |
| /// converted from a [`StartError`] to a [`MatchError`] using the offset |
| /// information in the given [`Input`]. |
| /// |
| /// # Errors |
| /// |
| /// This may return a [`MatchError`] if the search needs to give up |
| /// when determining the start state (for example, if it sees a "quit" |
| /// byte). This can also return an error if the given `Input` contains an |
| /// unsupported [`Anchored`] configuration. |
| fn start_state_forward( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| ) -> Result<StateID, MatchError> { |
| let config = start::Config::from_input_forward(input); |
| self.start_state(&config).map_err(|err| match err { |
| StartError::Quit { byte } => { |
| let offset = input |
| .start() |
| .checked_sub(1) |
| .expect("no quit in start without look-behind"); |
| MatchError::quit(byte, offset) |
| } |
| StartError::UnsupportedAnchored { mode } => { |
| MatchError::unsupported_anchored(mode) |
| } |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| /// Return the ID of the start state for this DFA when executing a reverse |
| /// search. |
| /// |
| /// This is a convenience routine for calling [`Automaton::start_state`] |
| /// that converts the given [`Input`] to a [start |
| /// configuration](start::Config). Additionally, if an error occurs, it is |
| /// converted from a [`StartError`] to a [`MatchError`] using the offset |
| /// information in the given [`Input`]. |
| /// |
| /// # Errors |
| /// |
| /// This may return a [`MatchError`] if the search needs to give up |
| /// when determining the start state (for example, if it sees a "quit" |
| /// byte). This can also return an error if the given `Input` contains an |
| /// unsupported [`Anchored`] configuration. |
| fn start_state_reverse( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| ) -> Result<StateID, MatchError> { |
| let config = start::Config::from_input_reverse(input); |
| self.start_state(&config).map_err(|err| match err { |
| StartError::Quit { byte } => { |
| let offset = input.end(); |
| MatchError::quit(byte, offset) |
| } |
| StartError::UnsupportedAnchored { mode } => { |
| MatchError::unsupported_anchored(mode) |
| } |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| /// If this DFA has a universal starting state for the given anchor mode |
| /// and the DFA supports universal starting states, then this returns that |
| /// state's identifier. |
| /// |
| /// A DFA is said to have a universal starting state when the starting |
| /// state is invariant with respect to the haystack. Usually, the starting |
| /// state is chosen depending on the bytes immediately surrounding the |
| /// starting position of a search. However, the starting state only differs |
| /// when one or more of the patterns in the DFA have look-around assertions |
| /// in its prefix. |
| /// |
| /// Stated differently, if none of the patterns in a DFA have look-around |
| /// assertions in their prefix, then the DFA has a universal starting state |
| /// and _may_ be returned by this method. |
| /// |
| /// It is always correct for implementations to return `None`, and indeed, |
| /// this is what the default implementation does. When this returns `None`, |
| /// callers must use either `start_state_forward` or `start_state_reverse` |
| /// to get the starting state. |
| /// |
| /// # Use case |
| /// |
| /// There are a few reasons why one might want to use this: |
| /// |
| /// * If you know your regex patterns have no look-around assertions in |
| /// their prefix, then calling this routine is likely cheaper and perhaps |
| /// more semantically meaningful. |
| /// * When implementing prefilter support in a DFA regex implementation, |
| /// it is necessary to re-compute the start state after a candidate |
| /// is returned from the prefilter. However, this is only needed when |
| /// there isn't a universal start state. When one exists, one can avoid |
| /// re-computing the start state. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{Automaton, dense::DFA}, |
| /// Anchored, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// // There are no look-around assertions in the prefixes of any of the |
| /// // patterns, so we get a universal start state. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new_many(&["[0-9]+", "[a-z]+$", "[A-Z]+"])?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.universal_start_state(Anchored::No).is_some()); |
| /// assert!(dfa.universal_start_state(Anchored::Yes).is_some()); |
| /// |
| /// // One of the patterns has a look-around assertion in its prefix, |
| /// // so this means there is no longer a universal start state. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new_many(&["[0-9]+", "^[a-z]+$", "[A-Z]+"])?; |
| /// assert!(!dfa.universal_start_state(Anchored::No).is_some()); |
| /// assert!(!dfa.universal_start_state(Anchored::Yes).is_some()); |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| #[inline] |
| fn universal_start_state(&self, _mode: Anchored) -> Option<StateID> { |
| None |
| } |
| |
| /// Returns true if and only if the given identifier corresponds to a |
| /// "special" state. A special state is one or more of the following: |
| /// a dead state, a quit state, a match state, a start state or an |
| /// accelerated state. |
| /// |
| /// A correct implementation _may_ always return false for states that |
| /// are either start states or accelerated states, since that information |
| /// is only intended to be used for optimization purposes. Correct |
| /// implementations must return true if the state is a dead, quit or match |
| /// state. This is because search routines using this trait must be able |
| /// to rely on `is_special_state` as an indicator that a state may need |
| /// special treatment. (For example, when a search routine sees a dead |
| /// state, it must terminate.) |
| /// |
| /// This routine permits search implementations to use a single branch to |
| /// check whether a state needs special attention before executing the next |
| /// transition. The example below shows how to do this. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how `is_special_state` can be used to implement a |
| /// correct search routine with minimal branching. In particular, this |
| /// search routine implements "leftmost" matching, which means that it |
| /// doesn't immediately stop once a match is found. Instead, it continues |
| /// until it reaches a dead state. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{Automaton, dense}, |
| /// HalfMatch, MatchError, Input, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// fn find<A: Automaton>( |
| /// dfa: &A, |
| /// haystack: &[u8], |
| /// ) -> Result<Option<HalfMatch>, MatchError> { |
| /// // The start state is determined by inspecting the position and the |
| /// // initial bytes of the haystack. Note that start states can never |
| /// // be match states (since DFAs in this crate delay matches by 1 |
| /// // byte), so we don't need to check if the start state is a match. |
| /// let mut state = dfa.start_state_forward(&Input::new(haystack))?; |
| /// let mut last_match = None; |
| /// // Walk all the bytes in the haystack. We can quit early if we see |
| /// // a dead or a quit state. The former means the automaton will |
| /// // never transition to any other state. The latter means that the |
| /// // automaton entered a condition in which its search failed. |
| /// for (i, &b) in haystack.iter().enumerate() { |
| /// state = dfa.next_state(state, b); |
| /// if dfa.is_special_state(state) { |
| /// if dfa.is_match_state(state) { |
| /// last_match = Some(HalfMatch::new( |
| /// dfa.match_pattern(state, 0), |
| /// i, |
| /// )); |
| /// } else if dfa.is_dead_state(state) { |
| /// return Ok(last_match); |
| /// } else if dfa.is_quit_state(state) { |
| /// // It is possible to enter into a quit state after |
| /// // observing a match has occurred. In that case, we |
| /// // should return the match instead of an error. |
| /// if last_match.is_some() { |
| /// return Ok(last_match); |
| /// } |
| /// return Err(MatchError::quit(b, i)); |
| /// } |
| /// // Implementors may also want to check for start or accel |
| /// // states and handle them differently for performance |
| /// // reasons. But it is not necessary for correctness. |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// // Matches are always delayed by 1 byte, so we must explicitly walk |
| /// // the special "EOI" transition at the end of the search. |
| /// state = dfa.next_eoi_state(state); |
| /// if dfa.is_match_state(state) { |
| /// last_match = Some(HalfMatch::new( |
| /// dfa.match_pattern(state, 0), |
| /// haystack.len(), |
| /// )); |
| /// } |
| /// Ok(last_match) |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// // We use a greedy '+' operator to show how the search doesn't just |
| /// // stop once a match is detected. It continues extending the match. |
| /// // Using '[a-z]+?' would also work as expected and stop the search |
| /// // early. Greediness is built into the automaton. |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::new(r"[a-z]+")?; |
| /// let haystack = "123 foobar 4567".as_bytes(); |
| /// let mat = find(&dfa, haystack)?.unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.pattern().as_usize(), 0); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.offset(), 10); |
| /// |
| /// // Here's another example that tests our handling of the special EOI |
| /// // transition. This will fail to find a match if we don't call |
| /// // 'next_eoi_state' at the end of the search since the match isn't |
| /// // found until the final byte in the haystack. |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::new(r"[0-9]{4}")?; |
| /// let haystack = "123 foobar 4567".as_bytes(); |
| /// let mat = find(&dfa, haystack)?.unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.pattern().as_usize(), 0); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.offset(), 15); |
| /// |
| /// // And note that our search implementation above automatically works |
| /// // with multi-DFAs. Namely, `dfa.match_pattern(match_state, 0)` selects |
| /// // the appropriate pattern ID for us. |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::new_many(&[r"[a-z]+", r"[0-9]+"])?; |
| /// let haystack = "123 foobar 4567".as_bytes(); |
| /// let mat = find(&dfa, haystack)?.unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.pattern().as_usize(), 1); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.offset(), 3); |
| /// let mat = find(&dfa, &haystack[3..])?.unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.pattern().as_usize(), 0); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.offset(), 7); |
| /// let mat = find(&dfa, &haystack[10..])?.unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.pattern().as_usize(), 1); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.offset(), 5); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn is_special_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Returns true if and only if the given identifier corresponds to a dead |
| /// state. When a DFA enters a dead state, it is impossible to leave. That |
| /// is, every transition on a dead state by definition leads back to the |
| /// same dead state. |
| /// |
| /// In practice, the dead state always corresponds to the identifier `0`. |
| /// Moreover, in practice, there is only one dead state. |
| /// |
| /// The existence of a dead state is not strictly required in the classical |
| /// model of finite state machines, where one generally only cares about |
| /// the question of whether an input sequence matches or not. Dead states |
| /// are not needed to answer that question, since one can immediately quit |
| /// as soon as one enters a final or "match" state. However, we don't just |
| /// care about matches but also care about the location of matches, and |
| /// more specifically, care about semantics like "greedy" matching. |
| /// |
| /// For example, given the pattern `a+` and the input `aaaz`, the dead |
| /// state won't be entered until the state machine reaches `z` in the |
| /// input, at which point, the search routine can quit. But without the |
| /// dead state, the search routine wouldn't know when to quit. In a |
| /// classical representation, the search routine would stop after seeing |
| /// the first `a` (which is when the search would enter a match state). But |
| /// this wouldn't implement "greedy" matching where `a+` matches as many |
| /// `a`'s as possible. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// See the example for [`Automaton::is_special_state`] for how to use this |
| /// method correctly. |
| fn is_dead_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Returns true if and only if the given identifier corresponds to a quit |
| /// state. A quit state is like a dead state (it has no transitions other |
| /// than to itself), except it indicates that the DFA failed to complete |
| /// the search. When this occurs, callers can neither accept or reject that |
| /// a match occurred. |
| /// |
| /// In practice, the quit state always corresponds to the state immediately |
| /// following the dead state. (Which is not usually represented by `1`, |
| /// since state identifiers are pre-multiplied by the state machine's |
| /// alphabet stride, and the alphabet stride varies between DFAs.) |
| /// |
| /// The typical way in which a quit state can occur is when heuristic |
| /// support for Unicode word boundaries is enabled via the |
| /// [`dense::Config::unicode_word_boundary`](crate::dfa::dense::Config::unicode_word_boundary) |
| /// option. But other options, like the lower level |
| /// [`dense::Config::quit`](crate::dfa::dense::Config::quit) |
| /// configuration, can also result in a quit state being entered. The |
| /// purpose of the quit state is to provide a way to execute a fast DFA |
| /// in common cases while delegating to slower routines when the DFA quits. |
| /// |
| /// The default search implementations provided by this crate will return a |
| /// [`MatchError::quit`] error when a quit state is entered. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// See the example for [`Automaton::is_special_state`] for how to use this |
| /// method correctly. |
| fn is_quit_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Returns true if and only if the given identifier corresponds to a |
| /// match state. A match state is also referred to as a "final" state and |
| /// indicates that a match has been found. |
| /// |
| /// If all you care about is whether a particular pattern matches in the |
| /// input sequence, then a search routine can quit early as soon as the |
| /// machine enters a match state. However, if you're looking for the |
| /// standard "leftmost-first" match location, then search _must_ continue |
| /// until either the end of the input or until the machine enters a dead |
| /// state. (Since either condition implies that no other useful work can |
| /// be done.) Namely, when looking for the location of a match, then |
| /// search implementations should record the most recent location in |
| /// which a match state was entered, but otherwise continue executing the |
| /// search as normal. (The search may even leave the match state.) Once |
| /// the termination condition is reached, the most recently recorded match |
| /// location should be returned. |
| /// |
| /// Finally, one additional power given to match states in this crate |
| /// is that they are always associated with a specific pattern in order |
| /// to support multi-DFAs. See [`Automaton::match_pattern`] for more |
| /// details and an example for how to query the pattern associated with a |
| /// particular match state. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// See the example for [`Automaton::is_special_state`] for how to use this |
| /// method correctly. |
| fn is_match_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Returns true only if the given identifier corresponds to a start |
| /// state |
| /// |
| /// A start state is a state in which a DFA begins a search. |
| /// All searches begin in a start state. Moreover, since all matches are |
| /// delayed by one byte, a start state can never be a match state. |
| /// |
| /// The main role of a start state is, as mentioned, to be a starting |
| /// point for a DFA. This starting point is determined via one of |
| /// [`Automaton::start_state_forward`] or |
| /// [`Automaton::start_state_reverse`], depending on whether one is doing |
| /// a forward or a reverse search, respectively. |
| /// |
| /// A secondary use of start states is for prefix acceleration. Namely, |
| /// while executing a search, if one detects that you're in a start state, |
| /// then it may be faster to look for the next match of a prefix of the |
| /// pattern, if one exists. If a prefix exists and since all matches must |
| /// begin with that prefix, then skipping ahead to occurrences of that |
| /// prefix may be much faster than executing the DFA. |
| /// |
| /// As mentioned in the documentation for |
| /// [`is_special_state`](Automaton::is_special_state) implementations |
| /// _may_ always return false, even if the given identifier is a start |
| /// state. This is because knowing whether a state is a start state or not |
| /// is not necessary for correctness and is only treated as a potential |
| /// performance optimization. (For example, the implementations of this |
| /// trait in this crate will only return true when the given identifier |
| /// corresponds to a start state and when [specialization of start |
| /// states](crate::dfa::dense::Config::specialize_start_states) was enabled |
| /// during DFA construction. If start state specialization is disabled |
| /// (which is the default), then this method will always return false.) |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how to implement your own search routine that does |
| /// a prefix search whenever the search enters a start state. |
| /// |
| /// Note that you do not need to implement your own search routine |
| /// to make use of prefilters like this. The search routines |
| /// provided by this crate already implement prefilter support via |
| /// the [`Prefilter`](crate::util::prefilter::Prefilter) trait. |
| /// A prefilter can be added to your search configuration with |
| /// [`dense::Config::prefilter`](crate::dfa::dense::Config::prefilter) for |
| /// dense and sparse DFAs in this crate. |
| /// |
| /// This example is meant to show how you might deal with prefilters in a |
| /// simplified case if you are implementing your own search routine. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{Automaton, dense}, |
| /// HalfMatch, MatchError, Input, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// fn find_byte(slice: &[u8], at: usize, byte: u8) -> Option<usize> { |
| /// // Would be faster to use the memchr crate, but this is still |
| /// // faster than running through the DFA. |
| /// slice[at..].iter().position(|&b| b == byte).map(|i| at + i) |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// fn find<A: Automaton>( |
| /// dfa: &A, |
| /// haystack: &[u8], |
| /// prefix_byte: Option<u8>, |
| /// ) -> Result<Option<HalfMatch>, MatchError> { |
| /// // See the Automaton::is_special_state example for similar code |
| /// // with more comments. |
| /// |
| /// let mut state = dfa.start_state_forward(&Input::new(haystack))?; |
| /// let mut last_match = None; |
| /// let mut pos = 0; |
| /// while pos < haystack.len() { |
| /// let b = haystack[pos]; |
| /// state = dfa.next_state(state, b); |
| /// pos += 1; |
| /// if dfa.is_special_state(state) { |
| /// if dfa.is_match_state(state) { |
| /// last_match = Some(HalfMatch::new( |
| /// dfa.match_pattern(state, 0), |
| /// pos - 1, |
| /// )); |
| /// } else if dfa.is_dead_state(state) { |
| /// return Ok(last_match); |
| /// } else if dfa.is_quit_state(state) { |
| /// // It is possible to enter into a quit state after |
| /// // observing a match has occurred. In that case, we |
| /// // should return the match instead of an error. |
| /// if last_match.is_some() { |
| /// return Ok(last_match); |
| /// } |
| /// return Err(MatchError::quit(b, pos - 1)); |
| /// } else if dfa.is_start_state(state) { |
| /// // If we're in a start state and know all matches begin |
| /// // with a particular byte, then we can quickly skip to |
| /// // candidate matches without running the DFA through |
| /// // every byte inbetween. |
| /// if let Some(prefix_byte) = prefix_byte { |
| /// pos = match find_byte(haystack, pos, prefix_byte) { |
| /// Some(pos) => pos, |
| /// None => break, |
| /// }; |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// // Matches are always delayed by 1 byte, so we must explicitly walk |
| /// // the special "EOI" transition at the end of the search. |
| /// state = dfa.next_eoi_state(state); |
| /// if dfa.is_match_state(state) { |
| /// last_match = Some(HalfMatch::new( |
| /// dfa.match_pattern(state, 0), |
| /// haystack.len(), |
| /// )); |
| /// } |
| /// Ok(last_match) |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// // In this example, it's obvious that all occurrences of our pattern |
| /// // begin with 'Z', so we pass in 'Z'. Note also that we need to |
| /// // enable start state specialization, or else it won't be possible to |
| /// // detect start states during a search. ('is_start_state' would always |
| /// // return false.) |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::builder() |
| /// .configure(dense::DFA::config().specialize_start_states(true)) |
| /// .build(r"Z[a-z]+")?; |
| /// let haystack = "123 foobar Zbaz quux".as_bytes(); |
| /// let mat = find(&dfa, haystack, Some(b'Z'))?.unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.pattern().as_usize(), 0); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.offset(), 15); |
| /// |
| /// // But note that we don't need to pass in a prefix byte. If we don't, |
| /// // then the search routine does no acceleration. |
| /// let mat = find(&dfa, haystack, None)?.unwrap(); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.pattern().as_usize(), 0); |
| /// assert_eq!(mat.offset(), 15); |
| /// |
| /// // However, if we pass an incorrect byte, then the prefix search will |
| /// // result in incorrect results. |
| /// assert_eq!(find(&dfa, haystack, Some(b'X'))?, None); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn is_start_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Returns true if and only if the given identifier corresponds to an |
| /// accelerated state. |
| /// |
| /// An accelerated state is a special optimization |
| /// trick implemented by this crate. Namely, if |
| /// [`dense::Config::accelerate`](crate::dfa::dense::Config::accelerate) is |
| /// enabled (and it is by default), then DFAs generated by this crate will |
| /// tag states meeting certain characteristics as accelerated. States meet |
| /// this criteria whenever most of their transitions are self-transitions. |
| /// That is, transitions that loop back to the same state. When a small |
| /// number of transitions aren't self-transitions, then it follows that |
| /// there are only a small number of bytes that can cause the DFA to leave |
| /// that state. Thus, there is an opportunity to look for those bytes |
| /// using more optimized routines rather than continuing to run through |
| /// the DFA. This trick is similar to the prefilter idea described in |
| /// the documentation of [`Automaton::is_start_state`] with two main |
| /// differences: |
| /// |
| /// 1. It is more limited since acceleration only applies to single bytes. |
| /// This means states are rarely accelerated when Unicode mode is enabled |
| /// (which is enabled by default). |
| /// 2. It can occur anywhere in the DFA, which increases optimization |
| /// opportunities. |
| /// |
| /// Like the prefilter idea, the main downside (and a possible reason to |
| /// disable it) is that it can lead to worse performance in some cases. |
| /// Namely, if a state is accelerated for very common bytes, then the |
| /// overhead of checking for acceleration and using the more optimized |
| /// routines to look for those bytes can cause overall performance to be |
| /// worse than if acceleration wasn't enabled at all. |
| /// |
| /// A simple example of a regex that has an accelerated state is |
| /// `(?-u)[^a]+a`. Namely, the `[^a]+` sub-expression gets compiled down |
| /// into a single state where all transitions except for `a` loop back to |
| /// itself, and where `a` is the only transition (other than the special |
| /// EOI transition) that goes to some other state. Thus, this state can |
| /// be accelerated and implemented more efficiently by calling an |
| /// optimized routine like `memchr` with `a` as the needle. Notice that |
| /// the `(?-u)` to disable Unicode is necessary here, as without it, |
| /// `[^a]` will match any UTF-8 encoding of any Unicode scalar value other |
| /// than `a`. This more complicated expression compiles down to many DFA |
| /// states and the simple acceleration optimization is no longer available. |
| /// |
| /// Typically, this routine is used to guard calls to |
| /// [`Automaton::accelerator`], which returns the accelerated bytes for |
| /// the specified state. |
| fn is_accel_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Returns the total number of patterns compiled into this DFA. |
| /// |
| /// In the case of a DFA that contains no patterns, this must return `0`. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows the pattern length for a DFA that never matches: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::dfa::{Automaton, dense::DFA}; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa: DFA<Vec<u32>> = DFA::never_match()?; |
| /// assert_eq!(dfa.pattern_len(), 0); |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// And another example for a DFA that matches at every position: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::dfa::{Automaton, dense::DFA}; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa: DFA<Vec<u32>> = DFA::always_match()?; |
| /// assert_eq!(dfa.pattern_len(), 1); |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// And finally, a DFA that was constructed from multiple patterns: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::dfa::{Automaton, dense::DFA}; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new_many(&["[0-9]+", "[a-z]+", "[A-Z]+"])?; |
| /// assert_eq!(dfa.pattern_len(), 3); |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn pattern_len(&self) -> usize; |
| |
| /// Returns the total number of patterns that match in this state. |
| /// |
| /// If the given state is not a match state, then implementations may |
| /// panic. |
| /// |
| /// If the DFA was compiled with one pattern, then this must necessarily |
| /// always return `1` for all match states. |
| /// |
| /// Implementations must guarantee that [`Automaton::match_pattern`] can be |
| /// called with indices up to (but not including) the length returned by |
| /// this routine without panicking. |
| /// |
| /// # Panics |
| /// |
| /// Implementations are permitted to panic if the provided state ID does |
| /// not correspond to a match state. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows a simple instance of implementing overlapping |
| /// matches. In particular, it shows not only how to determine how many |
| /// patterns have matched in a particular state, but also how to access |
| /// which specific patterns have matched. |
| /// |
| /// Notice that we must use |
| /// [`MatchKind::All`](crate::MatchKind::All) |
| /// when building the DFA. If we used |
| /// [`MatchKind::LeftmostFirst`](crate::MatchKind::LeftmostFirst) |
| /// instead, then the DFA would not be constructed in a way that |
| /// supports overlapping matches. (It would only report a single pattern |
| /// that matches at any particular point in time.) |
| /// |
| /// Another thing to take note of is the patterns used and the order in |
| /// which the pattern IDs are reported. In the example below, pattern `3` |
| /// is yielded first. Why? Because it corresponds to the match that |
| /// appears first. Namely, the `@` symbol is part of `\S+` but not part |
| /// of any of the other patterns. Since the `\S+` pattern has a match that |
| /// starts to the left of any other pattern, its ID is returned before any |
| /// other. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # if cfg!(miri) { return Ok(()); } // miri takes too long |
| /// use regex_automata::{dfa::{Automaton, dense}, Input, MatchKind}; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = dense::Builder::new() |
| /// .configure(dense::Config::new().match_kind(MatchKind::All)) |
| /// .build_many(&[ |
| /// r"[[:word:]]+", r"[a-z]+", r"[A-Z]+", r"[[:^space:]]+", |
| /// ])?; |
| /// let haystack = "@bar".as_bytes(); |
| /// |
| /// // The start state is determined by inspecting the position and the |
| /// // initial bytes of the haystack. |
| /// let mut state = dfa.start_state_forward(&Input::new(haystack))?; |
| /// // Walk all the bytes in the haystack. |
| /// for &b in haystack { |
| /// state = dfa.next_state(state, b); |
| /// } |
| /// state = dfa.next_eoi_state(state); |
| /// |
| /// assert!(dfa.is_match_state(state)); |
| /// assert_eq!(dfa.match_len(state), 3); |
| /// // The following calls are guaranteed to not panic since `match_len` |
| /// // returned `3` above. |
| /// assert_eq!(dfa.match_pattern(state, 0).as_usize(), 3); |
| /// assert_eq!(dfa.match_pattern(state, 1).as_usize(), 0); |
| /// assert_eq!(dfa.match_pattern(state, 2).as_usize(), 1); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn match_len(&self, id: StateID) -> usize; |
| |
| /// Returns the pattern ID corresponding to the given match index in the |
| /// given state. |
| /// |
| /// See [`Automaton::match_len`] for an example of how to use this |
| /// method correctly. Note that if you know your DFA is compiled with a |
| /// single pattern, then this routine is never necessary since it will |
| /// always return a pattern ID of `0` for an index of `0` when `id` |
| /// corresponds to a match state. |
| /// |
| /// Typically, this routine is used when implementing an overlapping |
| /// search, as the example for `Automaton::match_len` does. |
| /// |
| /// # Panics |
| /// |
| /// If the state ID is not a match state or if the match index is out |
| /// of bounds for the given state, then this routine may either panic |
| /// or produce an incorrect result. If the state ID is correct and the |
| /// match index is correct, then this routine must always produce a valid |
| /// `PatternID`. |
| fn match_pattern(&self, id: StateID, index: usize) -> PatternID; |
| |
| /// Returns true if and only if this automaton can match the empty string. |
| /// When it returns false, all possible matches are guaranteed to have a |
| /// non-zero length. |
| /// |
| /// This is useful as cheap way to know whether code needs to handle the |
| /// case of a zero length match. This is particularly important when UTF-8 |
| /// modes are enabled, as when UTF-8 mode is enabled, empty matches that |
| /// split a codepoint must never be reported. This extra handling can |
| /// sometimes be costly, and since regexes matching an empty string are |
| /// somewhat rare, it can be beneficial to treat such regexes specially. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows a few different DFAs and whether they match the |
| /// empty string or not. Notice the empty string isn't merely a matter |
| /// of a string of length literally `0`, but rather, whether a match can |
| /// occur between specific pairs of bytes. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{dfa::{dense::DFA, Automaton}, util::syntax}; |
| /// |
| /// // The empty regex matches the empty string. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("")?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.has_empty(), "empty matches empty"); |
| /// // The '+' repetition operator requires at least one match, and so |
| /// // does not match the empty string. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("a+")?; |
| /// assert!(!dfa.has_empty(), "+ does not match empty"); |
| /// // But the '*' repetition operator does. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("a*")?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.has_empty(), "* does match empty"); |
| /// // And wrapping '+' in an operator that can match an empty string also |
| /// // causes it to match the empty string too. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("(a+)*")?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.has_empty(), "+ inside of * matches empty"); |
| /// |
| /// // If a regex is just made of a look-around assertion, even if the |
| /// // assertion requires some kind of non-empty string around it (such as |
| /// // \b), then it is still treated as if it matches the empty string. |
| /// // Namely, if a match occurs of just a look-around assertion, then the |
| /// // match returned is empty. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::builder() |
| /// .configure(DFA::config().unicode_word_boundary(true)) |
| /// .syntax(syntax::Config::new().utf8(false)) |
| /// .build(r"^$\A\z\b\B(?-u:\b\B)")?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.has_empty(), "assertions match empty"); |
| /// // Even when an assertion is wrapped in a '+', it still matches the |
| /// // empty string. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new(r"^+")?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.has_empty(), "+ of an assertion matches empty"); |
| /// |
| /// // An alternation with even one branch that can match the empty string |
| /// // is also said to match the empty string overall. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("foo|(bar)?|quux")?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.has_empty(), "alternations can match empty"); |
| /// |
| /// // An NFA that matches nothing does not match the empty string. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("[a&&b]")?; |
| /// assert!(!dfa.has_empty(), "never matching means not matching empty"); |
| /// // But if it's wrapped in something that doesn't require a match at |
| /// // all, then it can match the empty string! |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("[a&&b]*")?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.has_empty(), "* on never-match still matches empty"); |
| /// // Since a '+' requires a match, using it on something that can never |
| /// // match will itself produce a regex that can never match anything, |
| /// // and thus does not match the empty string. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("[a&&b]+")?; |
| /// assert!(!dfa.has_empty(), "+ on never-match still matches nothing"); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn has_empty(&self) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Whether UTF-8 mode is enabled for this DFA or not. |
| /// |
| /// When UTF-8 mode is enabled, all matches reported by a DFA are |
| /// guaranteed to correspond to spans of valid UTF-8. This includes |
| /// zero-width matches. For example, the DFA must guarantee that the empty |
| /// regex will not match at the positions between code units in the UTF-8 |
| /// encoding of a single codepoint. |
| /// |
| /// See [`thompson::Config::utf8`](crate::nfa::thompson::Config::utf8) for |
| /// more information. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how UTF-8 mode can impact the match spans that may |
| /// be reported in certain cases. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{dense::DFA, Automaton}, |
| /// nfa::thompson, |
| /// HalfMatch, Input, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// // UTF-8 mode is enabled by default. |
| /// let re = DFA::new("")?; |
| /// assert!(re.is_utf8()); |
| /// let mut input = Input::new("☃"); |
| /// let got = re.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 0)), got); |
| /// |
| /// // Even though an empty regex matches at 1..1, our next match is |
| /// // 3..3 because 1..1 and 2..2 split the snowman codepoint (which is |
| /// // three bytes long). |
| /// input.set_start(1); |
| /// let got = re.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 3)), got); |
| /// |
| /// // But if we disable UTF-8, then we'll get matches at 1..1 and 2..2: |
| /// let re = DFA::builder() |
| /// .thompson(thompson::Config::new().utf8(false)) |
| /// .build("")?; |
| /// assert!(!re.is_utf8()); |
| /// let got = re.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 1)), got); |
| /// |
| /// input.set_start(2); |
| /// let got = re.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 2)), got); |
| /// |
| /// input.set_start(3); |
| /// let got = re.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 3)), got); |
| /// |
| /// input.set_start(4); |
| /// let got = re.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(None, got); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn is_utf8(&self) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Returns true if and only if this DFA is limited to returning matches |
| /// whose start position is `0`. |
| /// |
| /// Note that if you're using DFAs provided by |
| /// this crate, then this is _orthogonal_ to |
| /// [`Config::start_kind`](crate::dfa::dense::Config::start_kind). |
| /// |
| /// This is useful in some cases because if a DFA is limited to producing |
| /// matches that start at offset `0`, then a reverse search is never |
| /// required for finding the start of a match. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::dfa::{dense::DFA, Automaton}; |
| /// |
| /// // The empty regex matches anywhere |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("")?; |
| /// assert!(!dfa.is_always_start_anchored(), "empty matches anywhere"); |
| /// // 'a' matches anywhere. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("a")?; |
| /// assert!(!dfa.is_always_start_anchored(), "'a' matches anywhere"); |
| /// // '^' only matches at offset 0! |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("^a")?; |
| /// assert!(dfa.is_always_start_anchored(), "'^a' matches only at 0"); |
| /// // But '(?m:^)' matches at 0 but at other offsets too. |
| /// let dfa = DFA::new("(?m:^)a")?; |
| /// assert!(!dfa.is_always_start_anchored(), "'(?m:^)a' matches anywhere"); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| fn is_always_start_anchored(&self) -> bool; |
| |
| /// Return a slice of bytes to accelerate for the given state, if possible. |
| /// |
| /// If the given state has no accelerator, then an empty slice must be |
| /// returned. If `Automaton::is_accel_state` returns true for the given ID, |
| /// then this routine _must_ return a non-empty slice. But note that it is |
| /// not required for an implementation of this trait to ever return `true` |
| /// for `is_accel_state`, even if the state _could_ be accelerated. That |
| /// is, acceleration is an optional optimization. But the return values of |
| /// `is_accel_state` and `accelerator` must be in sync. |
| /// |
| /// If the given ID is not a valid state ID for this automaton, then |
| /// implementations may panic or produce incorrect results. |
| /// |
| /// See [`Automaton::is_accel_state`] for more details on state |
| /// acceleration. |
| /// |
| /// By default, this method will always return an empty slice. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows a contrived case in which we build a regex that we |
| /// know is accelerated and extract the accelerator from a state. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{Automaton, dense}, |
| /// util::{primitives::StateID, syntax}, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = dense::Builder::new() |
| /// // We disable Unicode everywhere and permit the regex to match |
| /// // invalid UTF-8. e.g., [^abc] matches \xFF, which is not valid |
| /// // UTF-8. If we left Unicode enabled, [^abc] would match any UTF-8 |
| /// // encoding of any Unicode scalar value except for 'a', 'b' or 'c'. |
| /// // That translates to a much more complicated DFA, and also |
| /// // inhibits the 'accelerator' optimization that we are trying to |
| /// // demonstrate in this example. |
| /// .syntax(syntax::Config::new().unicode(false).utf8(false)) |
| /// .build("[^abc]+a")?; |
| /// |
| /// // Here we just pluck out the state that we know is accelerated. |
| /// // While the stride calculations are something that can be relied |
| /// // on by callers, the specific position of the accelerated state is |
| /// // implementation defined. |
| /// // |
| /// // N.B. We get '3' by inspecting the state machine using 'regex-cli'. |
| /// // e.g., try `regex-cli debug dense dfa -p '[^abc]+a' -BbUC`. |
| /// let id = StateID::new(3 * dfa.stride()).unwrap(); |
| /// let accelerator = dfa.accelerator(id); |
| /// // The `[^abc]+` sub-expression permits [a, b, c] to be accelerated. |
| /// assert_eq!(accelerator, &[b'a', b'b', b'c']); |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| #[inline] |
| fn accelerator(&self, _id: StateID) -> &[u8] { |
| &[] |
| } |
| |
| /// Returns the prefilter associated with a DFA, if one exists. |
| /// |
| /// The default implementation of this trait always returns `None`. And |
| /// indeed, it is always correct to return `None`. |
| /// |
| /// For DFAs in this crate, a prefilter can be attached to a DFA via |
| /// [`dense::Config::prefilter`](crate::dfa::dense::Config::prefilter). |
| /// |
| /// Do note that prefilters are not serialized by DFAs in this crate. |
| /// So if you deserialize a DFA that had a prefilter attached to it |
| /// at serialization time, then it will not have a prefilter after |
| /// deserialization. |
| #[inline] |
| fn get_prefilter(&self) -> Option<&Prefilter> { |
| None |
| } |
| |
| /// Executes a forward search and returns the end position of the leftmost |
| /// match that is found. If no match exists, then `None` is returned. |
| /// |
| /// In particular, this method continues searching even after it enters |
| /// a match state. The search only terminates once it has reached the |
| /// end of the input or when it has entered a dead or quit state. Upon |
| /// termination, the position of the last byte seen while still in a match |
| /// state is returned. |
| /// |
| /// # Errors |
| /// |
| /// This routine errors if the search could not complete. This can occur |
| /// in a number of circumstances: |
| /// |
| /// * The configuration of the DFA may permit it to "quit" the search. |
| /// For example, setting quit bytes or enabling heuristic support for |
| /// Unicode word boundaries. The default configuration does not enable any |
| /// option that could result in the DFA quitting. |
| /// * When the provided `Input` configuration is not supported. For |
| /// example, by providing an unsupported anchor mode. |
| /// |
| /// When a search returns an error, callers cannot know whether a match |
| /// exists or not. |
| /// |
| /// # Notes for implementors |
| /// |
| /// Implementors of this trait are not required to implement any particular |
| /// match semantics (such as leftmost-first), which are instead manifest in |
| /// the DFA's transitions. But this search routine should behave as a |
| /// general "leftmost" search. |
| /// |
| /// In particular, this method must continue searching even after it enters |
| /// a match state. The search should only terminate once it has reached |
| /// the end of the input or when it has entered a dead or quit state. Upon |
| /// termination, the position of the last byte seen while still in a match |
| /// state is returned. |
| /// |
| /// Since this trait provides an implementation for this method by default, |
| /// it's unlikely that one will need to implement this. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how to use this method with a |
| /// [`dense::DFA`](crate::dfa::dense::DFA). |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{dfa::{Automaton, dense}, HalfMatch, Input}; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::new("foo[0-9]+")?; |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 8)); |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, dfa.try_search_fwd(&Input::new(b"foo12345"))?); |
| /// |
| /// // Even though a match is found after reading the first byte (`a`), |
| /// // the leftmost first match semantics demand that we find the earliest |
| /// // match that prefers earlier parts of the pattern over latter parts. |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::new("abc|a")?; |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 3)); |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, dfa.try_search_fwd(&Input::new(b"abc"))?); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// # Example: specific pattern search |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how to build a multi-DFA that permits searching for |
| /// specific patterns. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # if cfg!(miri) { return Ok(()); } // miri takes too long |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{Automaton, dense}, |
| /// Anchored, HalfMatch, PatternID, Input, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = dense::Builder::new() |
| /// .configure(dense::Config::new().starts_for_each_pattern(true)) |
| /// .build_many(&["[a-z0-9]{6}", "[a-z][a-z0-9]{5}"])?; |
| /// let haystack = "foo123".as_bytes(); |
| /// |
| /// // Since we are using the default leftmost-first match and both |
| /// // patterns match at the same starting position, only the first pattern |
| /// // will be returned in this case when doing a search for any of the |
| /// // patterns. |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 6)); |
| /// let got = dfa.try_search_fwd(&Input::new(haystack))?; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, got); |
| /// |
| /// // But if we want to check whether some other pattern matches, then we |
| /// // can provide its pattern ID. |
| /// let input = Input::new(haystack) |
| /// .anchored(Anchored::Pattern(PatternID::must(1))); |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(1, 6)); |
| /// let got = dfa.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, got); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// # Example: specifying the bounds of a search |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how providing the bounds of a search can produce |
| /// different results than simply sub-slicing the haystack. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{dfa::{Automaton, dense}, HalfMatch, Input}; |
| /// |
| /// // N.B. We disable Unicode here so that we use a simple ASCII word |
| /// // boundary. Alternatively, we could enable heuristic support for |
| /// // Unicode word boundaries. |
| /// let dfa = dense::DFA::new(r"(?-u)\b[0-9]{3}\b")?; |
| /// let haystack = "foo123bar".as_bytes(); |
| /// |
| /// // Since we sub-slice the haystack, the search doesn't know about the |
| /// // larger context and assumes that `123` is surrounded by word |
| /// // boundaries. And of course, the match position is reported relative |
| /// // to the sub-slice as well, which means we get `3` instead of `6`. |
| /// let input = Input::new(&haystack[3..6]); |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 3)); |
| /// let got = dfa.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, got); |
| /// |
| /// // But if we provide the bounds of the search within the context of the |
| /// // entire haystack, then the search can take the surrounding context |
| /// // into account. (And if we did find a match, it would be reported |
| /// // as a valid offset into `haystack` instead of its sub-slice.) |
| /// let input = Input::new(haystack).range(3..6); |
| /// let expected = None; |
| /// let got = dfa.try_search_fwd(&input)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, got); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_search_fwd( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| ) -> Result<Option<HalfMatch>, MatchError> { |
| let utf8empty = self.has_empty() && self.is_utf8(); |
| let hm = match search::find_fwd(&self, input)? { |
| None => return Ok(None), |
| Some(hm) if !utf8empty => return Ok(Some(hm)), |
| Some(hm) => hm, |
| }; |
| // We get to this point when we know our DFA can match the empty string |
| // AND when UTF-8 mode is enabled. In this case, we skip any matches |
| // whose offset splits a codepoint. Such a match is necessarily a |
| // zero-width match, because UTF-8 mode requires the underlying NFA |
| // to be built such that all non-empty matches span valid UTF-8. |
| // Therefore, any match that ends in the middle of a codepoint cannot |
| // be part of a span of valid UTF-8 and thus must be an empty match. |
| // In such cases, we skip it, so as not to report matches that split a |
| // codepoint. |
| // |
| // Note that this is not a checked assumption. Callers *can* provide an |
| // NFA with UTF-8 mode enabled but produces non-empty matches that span |
| // invalid UTF-8. But doing so is documented to result in unspecified |
| // behavior. |
| empty::skip_splits_fwd(input, hm, hm.offset(), |input| { |
| let got = search::find_fwd(&self, input)?; |
| Ok(got.map(|hm| (hm, hm.offset()))) |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| /// Executes a reverse search and returns the start of the position of the |
| /// leftmost match that is found. If no match exists, then `None` is |
| /// returned. |
| /// |
| /// # Errors |
| /// |
| /// This routine errors if the search could not complete. This can occur |
| /// in a number of circumstances: |
| /// |
| /// * The configuration of the DFA may permit it to "quit" the search. |
| /// For example, setting quit bytes or enabling heuristic support for |
| /// Unicode word boundaries. The default configuration does not enable any |
| /// option that could result in the DFA quitting. |
| /// * When the provided `Input` configuration is not supported. For |
| /// example, by providing an unsupported anchor mode. |
| /// |
| /// When a search returns an error, callers cannot know whether a match |
| /// exists or not. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how to use this method with a |
| /// [`dense::DFA`](crate::dfa::dense::DFA). In particular, this |
| /// routine is principally useful when used in conjunction with the |
| /// [`nfa::thompson::Config::reverse`](crate::nfa::thompson::Config::reverse) |
| /// configuration. In general, it's unlikely to be correct to use |
| /// both `try_search_fwd` and `try_search_rev` with the same DFA since |
| /// any particular DFA will only support searching in one direction with |
| /// respect to the pattern. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// nfa::thompson, |
| /// dfa::{Automaton, dense}, |
| /// HalfMatch, Input, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = dense::Builder::new() |
| /// .thompson(thompson::Config::new().reverse(true)) |
| /// .build("foo[0-9]+")?; |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 0)); |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, dfa.try_search_rev(&Input::new(b"foo12345"))?); |
| /// |
| /// // Even though a match is found after reading the last byte (`c`), |
| /// // the leftmost first match semantics demand that we find the earliest |
| /// // match that prefers earlier parts of the pattern over latter parts. |
| /// let dfa = dense::Builder::new() |
| /// .thompson(thompson::Config::new().reverse(true)) |
| /// .build("abc|c")?; |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 0)); |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, dfa.try_search_rev(&Input::new(b"abc"))?); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// # Example: UTF-8 mode |
| /// |
| /// This examples demonstrates that UTF-8 mode applies to reverse |
| /// DFAs. When UTF-8 mode is enabled in the underlying NFA, then all |
| /// matches reported must correspond to valid UTF-8 spans. This includes |
| /// prohibiting zero-width matches that split a codepoint. |
| /// |
| /// UTF-8 mode is enabled by default. Notice below how the only zero-width |
| /// matches reported are those at UTF-8 boundaries: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{dense::DFA, Automaton}, |
| /// nfa::thompson, |
| /// HalfMatch, Input, MatchKind, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = DFA::builder() |
| /// .thompson(thompson::Config::new().reverse(true)) |
| /// .build(r"")?; |
| /// |
| /// // Run the reverse DFA to collect all matches. |
| /// let mut input = Input::new("☃"); |
| /// let mut matches = vec![]; |
| /// loop { |
| /// match dfa.try_search_rev(&input)? { |
| /// None => break, |
| /// Some(hm) => { |
| /// matches.push(hm); |
| /// if hm.offset() == 0 || input.end() == 0 { |
| /// break; |
| /// } else if hm.offset() < input.end() { |
| /// input.set_end(hm.offset()); |
| /// } else { |
| /// // This is only necessary to handle zero-width |
| /// // matches, which of course occur in this example. |
| /// // Without this, the search would never advance |
| /// // backwards beyond the initial match. |
| /// input.set_end(input.end() - 1); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// // No matches split a codepoint. |
| /// let expected = vec![ |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 3), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 0), |
| /// ]; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, matches); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Now let's look at the same example, but with UTF-8 mode on the |
| /// original NFA disabled (which results in disabling UTF-8 mode on the |
| /// DFA): |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{dense::DFA, Automaton}, |
| /// nfa::thompson, |
| /// HalfMatch, Input, MatchKind, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = DFA::builder() |
| /// .thompson(thompson::Config::new().reverse(true).utf8(false)) |
| /// .build(r"")?; |
| /// |
| /// // Run the reverse DFA to collect all matches. |
| /// let mut input = Input::new("☃"); |
| /// let mut matches = vec![]; |
| /// loop { |
| /// match dfa.try_search_rev(&input)? { |
| /// None => break, |
| /// Some(hm) => { |
| /// matches.push(hm); |
| /// if hm.offset() == 0 || input.end() == 0 { |
| /// break; |
| /// } else if hm.offset() < input.end() { |
| /// input.set_end(hm.offset()); |
| /// } else { |
| /// // This is only necessary to handle zero-width |
| /// // matches, which of course occur in this example. |
| /// // Without this, the search would never advance |
| /// // backwards beyond the initial match. |
| /// input.set_end(input.end() - 1); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// // No matches split a codepoint. |
| /// let expected = vec![ |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 3), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 2), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 1), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 0), |
| /// ]; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, matches); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_search_rev( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| ) -> Result<Option<HalfMatch>, MatchError> { |
| let utf8empty = self.has_empty() && self.is_utf8(); |
| let hm = match search::find_rev(self, input)? { |
| None => return Ok(None), |
| Some(hm) if !utf8empty => return Ok(Some(hm)), |
| Some(hm) => hm, |
| }; |
| empty::skip_splits_rev(input, hm, hm.offset(), |input| { |
| let got = search::find_rev(self, input)?; |
| Ok(got.map(|hm| (hm, hm.offset()))) |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| /// Executes an overlapping forward search. Matches, if one exists, can be |
| /// obtained via the [`OverlappingState::get_match`] method. |
| /// |
| /// This routine is principally only useful when searching for multiple |
| /// patterns on inputs where multiple patterns may match the same regions |
| /// of text. In particular, callers must preserve the automaton's search |
| /// state from prior calls so that the implementation knows where the last |
| /// match occurred. |
| /// |
| /// When using this routine to implement an iterator of overlapping |
| /// matches, the `start` of the search should always be set to the end |
| /// of the last match. If more patterns match at the previous location, |
| /// then they will be immediately returned. (This is tracked by the given |
| /// overlapping state.) Otherwise, the search continues at the starting |
| /// position given. |
| /// |
| /// If for some reason you want the search to forget about its previous |
| /// state and restart the search at a particular position, then setting the |
| /// state to [`OverlappingState::start`] will accomplish that. |
| /// |
| /// # Errors |
| /// |
| /// This routine errors if the search could not complete. This can occur |
| /// in a number of circumstances: |
| /// |
| /// * The configuration of the DFA may permit it to "quit" the search. |
| /// For example, setting quit bytes or enabling heuristic support for |
| /// Unicode word boundaries. The default configuration does not enable any |
| /// option that could result in the DFA quitting. |
| /// * When the provided `Input` configuration is not supported. For |
| /// example, by providing an unsupported anchor mode. |
| /// |
| /// When a search returns an error, callers cannot know whether a match |
| /// exists or not. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how to run a basic overlapping search with a |
| /// [`dense::DFA`](crate::dfa::dense::DFA). Notice that we build the |
| /// automaton with a `MatchKind::All` configuration. Overlapping searches |
| /// are unlikely to work as one would expect when using the default |
| /// `MatchKind::LeftmostFirst` match semantics, since leftmost-first |
| /// matching is fundamentally incompatible with overlapping searches. |
| /// Namely, overlapping searches need to report matches as they are seen, |
| /// where as leftmost-first searches will continue searching even after a |
| /// match has been observed in order to find the conventional end position |
| /// of the match. More concretely, leftmost-first searches use dead states |
| /// to terminate a search after a specific match can no longer be extended. |
| /// Overlapping searches instead do the opposite by continuing the search |
| /// to find totally new matches (potentially of other patterns). |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # if cfg!(miri) { return Ok(()); } // miri takes too long |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{Automaton, OverlappingState, dense}, |
| /// HalfMatch, Input, MatchKind, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = dense::Builder::new() |
| /// .configure(dense::Config::new().match_kind(MatchKind::All)) |
| /// .build_many(&[r"[[:word:]]+$", r"[[:^space:]]+$"])?; |
| /// let haystack = "@foo"; |
| /// let mut state = OverlappingState::start(); |
| /// |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(1, 4)); |
| /// dfa.try_search_overlapping_fwd(&Input::new(haystack), &mut state)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, state.get_match()); |
| /// |
| /// // The first pattern also matches at the same position, so re-running |
| /// // the search will yield another match. Notice also that the first |
| /// // pattern is returned after the second. This is because the second |
| /// // pattern begins its match before the first, is therefore an earlier |
| /// // match and is thus reported first. |
| /// let expected = Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 4)); |
| /// dfa.try_search_overlapping_fwd(&Input::new(haystack), &mut state)?; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, state.get_match()); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_search_overlapping_fwd( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| state: &mut OverlappingState, |
| ) -> Result<(), MatchError> { |
| let utf8empty = self.has_empty() && self.is_utf8(); |
| search::find_overlapping_fwd(self, input, state)?; |
| match state.get_match() { |
| None => Ok(()), |
| Some(_) if !utf8empty => Ok(()), |
| Some(_) => skip_empty_utf8_splits_overlapping( |
| input, |
| state, |
| |input, state| { |
| search::find_overlapping_fwd(self, input, state) |
| }, |
| ), |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Executes a reverse overlapping forward search. Matches, if one exists, |
| /// can be obtained via the [`OverlappingState::get_match`] method. |
| /// |
| /// When using this routine to implement an iterator of overlapping |
| /// matches, the `start` of the search should remain invariant throughout |
| /// iteration. The `OverlappingState` given to the search will keep track |
| /// of the current position of the search. (This is because multiple |
| /// matches may be reported at the same position, so only the search |
| /// implementation itself knows when to advance the position.) |
| /// |
| /// If for some reason you want the search to forget about its previous |
| /// state and restart the search at a particular position, then setting the |
| /// state to [`OverlappingState::start`] will accomplish that. |
| /// |
| /// # Errors |
| /// |
| /// This routine errors if the search could not complete. This can occur |
| /// in a number of circumstances: |
| /// |
| /// * The configuration of the DFA may permit it to "quit" the search. |
| /// For example, setting quit bytes or enabling heuristic support for |
| /// Unicode word boundaries. The default configuration does not enable any |
| /// option that could result in the DFA quitting. |
| /// * When the provided `Input` configuration is not supported. For |
| /// example, by providing an unsupported anchor mode. |
| /// |
| /// When a search returns an error, callers cannot know whether a match |
| /// exists or not. |
| /// |
| /// # Example: UTF-8 mode |
| /// |
| /// This examples demonstrates that UTF-8 mode applies to reverse |
| /// DFAs. When UTF-8 mode is enabled in the underlying NFA, then all |
| /// matches reported must correspond to valid UTF-8 spans. This includes |
| /// prohibiting zero-width matches that split a codepoint. |
| /// |
| /// UTF-8 mode is enabled by default. Notice below how the only zero-width |
| /// matches reported are those at UTF-8 boundaries: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{dense::DFA, Automaton, OverlappingState}, |
| /// nfa::thompson, |
| /// HalfMatch, Input, MatchKind, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = DFA::builder() |
| /// .configure(DFA::config().match_kind(MatchKind::All)) |
| /// .thompson(thompson::Config::new().reverse(true)) |
| /// .build_many(&[r"", r"☃"])?; |
| /// |
| /// // Run the reverse DFA to collect all matches. |
| /// let input = Input::new("☃"); |
| /// let mut state = OverlappingState::start(); |
| /// let mut matches = vec![]; |
| /// loop { |
| /// dfa.try_search_overlapping_rev(&input, &mut state)?; |
| /// match state.get_match() { |
| /// None => break, |
| /// Some(hm) => matches.push(hm), |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// // No matches split a codepoint. |
| /// let expected = vec![ |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 3), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(1, 0), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 0), |
| /// ]; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, matches); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Now let's look at the same example, but with UTF-8 mode on the |
| /// original NFA disabled (which results in disabling UTF-8 mode on the |
| /// DFA): |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{dense::DFA, Automaton, OverlappingState}, |
| /// nfa::thompson, |
| /// HalfMatch, Input, MatchKind, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let dfa = DFA::builder() |
| /// .configure(DFA::config().match_kind(MatchKind::All)) |
| /// .thompson(thompson::Config::new().reverse(true).utf8(false)) |
| /// .build_many(&[r"", r"☃"])?; |
| /// |
| /// // Run the reverse DFA to collect all matches. |
| /// let input = Input::new("☃"); |
| /// let mut state = OverlappingState::start(); |
| /// let mut matches = vec![]; |
| /// loop { |
| /// dfa.try_search_overlapping_rev(&input, &mut state)?; |
| /// match state.get_match() { |
| /// None => break, |
| /// Some(hm) => matches.push(hm), |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// // Now *all* positions match, even within a codepoint, |
| /// // because we lifted the requirement that matches |
| /// // correspond to valid UTF-8 spans. |
| /// let expected = vec![ |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 3), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 2), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 1), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(1, 0), |
| /// HalfMatch::must(0, 0), |
| /// ]; |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, matches); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_search_overlapping_rev( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| state: &mut OverlappingState, |
| ) -> Result<(), MatchError> { |
| let utf8empty = self.has_empty() && self.is_utf8(); |
| search::find_overlapping_rev(self, input, state)?; |
| match state.get_match() { |
| None => Ok(()), |
| Some(_) if !utf8empty => Ok(()), |
| Some(_) => skip_empty_utf8_splits_overlapping( |
| input, |
| state, |
| |input, state| { |
| search::find_overlapping_rev(self, input, state) |
| }, |
| ), |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Writes the set of patterns that match anywhere in the given search |
| /// configuration to `patset`. If multiple patterns match at the same |
| /// position and the underlying DFA supports overlapping matches, then all |
| /// matching patterns are written to the given set. |
| /// |
| /// Unless all of the patterns in this DFA are anchored, then generally |
| /// speaking, this will visit every byte in the haystack. |
| /// |
| /// This search routine *does not* clear the pattern set. This gives some |
| /// flexibility to the caller (e.g., running multiple searches with the |
| /// same pattern set), but does make the API bug-prone if you're reusing |
| /// the same pattern set for multiple searches but intended them to be |
| /// independent. |
| /// |
| /// If a pattern ID matched but the given `PatternSet` does not have |
| /// sufficient capacity to store it, then it is not inserted and silently |
| /// dropped. |
| /// |
| /// # Errors |
| /// |
| /// This routine errors if the search could not complete. This can occur |
| /// in a number of circumstances: |
| /// |
| /// * The configuration of the DFA may permit it to "quit" the search. |
| /// For example, setting quit bytes or enabling heuristic support for |
| /// Unicode word boundaries. The default configuration does not enable any |
| /// option that could result in the DFA quitting. |
| /// * When the provided `Input` configuration is not supported. For |
| /// example, by providing an unsupported anchor mode. |
| /// |
| /// When a search returns an error, callers cannot know whether a match |
| /// exists or not. |
| /// |
| /// # Example |
| /// |
| /// This example shows how to find all matching patterns in a haystack, |
| /// even when some patterns match at the same position as other patterns. |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// # if cfg!(miri) { return Ok(()); } // miri takes too long |
| /// use regex_automata::{ |
| /// dfa::{Automaton, dense::DFA}, |
| /// Input, MatchKind, PatternSet, |
| /// }; |
| /// |
| /// let patterns = &[ |
| /// r"[[:word:]]+", |
| /// r"[0-9]+", |
| /// r"[[:alpha:]]+", |
| /// r"foo", |
| /// r"bar", |
| /// r"barfoo", |
| /// r"foobar", |
| /// ]; |
| /// let dfa = DFA::builder() |
| /// .configure(DFA::config().match_kind(MatchKind::All)) |
| /// .build_many(patterns)?; |
| /// |
| /// let input = Input::new("foobar"); |
| /// let mut patset = PatternSet::new(dfa.pattern_len()); |
| /// dfa.try_which_overlapping_matches(&input, &mut patset)?; |
| /// let expected = vec![0, 2, 3, 4, 6]; |
| /// let got: Vec<usize> = patset.iter().map(|p| p.as_usize()).collect(); |
| /// assert_eq!(expected, got); |
| /// |
| /// # Ok::<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>>(()) |
| /// ``` |
| #[cfg(feature = "alloc")] |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_which_overlapping_matches( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| patset: &mut PatternSet, |
| ) -> Result<(), MatchError> { |
| let mut state = OverlappingState::start(); |
| while let Some(m) = { |
| self.try_search_overlapping_fwd(input, &mut state)?; |
| state.get_match() |
| } { |
| let _ = patset.insert(m.pattern()); |
| // There's nothing left to find, so we can stop. Or the caller |
| // asked us to. |
| if patset.is_full() || input.get_earliest() { |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| Ok(()) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| unsafe impl<'a, A: Automaton + ?Sized> Automaton for &'a A { |
| #[inline] |
| fn next_state(&self, current: StateID, input: u8) -> StateID { |
| (**self).next_state(current, input) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| unsafe fn next_state_unchecked( |
| &self, |
| current: StateID, |
| input: u8, |
| ) -> StateID { |
| (**self).next_state_unchecked(current, input) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn next_eoi_state(&self, current: StateID) -> StateID { |
| (**self).next_eoi_state(current) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn start_state( |
| &self, |
| config: &start::Config, |
| ) -> Result<StateID, StartError> { |
| (**self).start_state(config) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn start_state_forward( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| ) -> Result<StateID, MatchError> { |
| (**self).start_state_forward(input) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn start_state_reverse( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| ) -> Result<StateID, MatchError> { |
| (**self).start_state_reverse(input) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn universal_start_state(&self, mode: Anchored) -> Option<StateID> { |
| (**self).universal_start_state(mode) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn is_special_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool { |
| (**self).is_special_state(id) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn is_dead_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool { |
| (**self).is_dead_state(id) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn is_quit_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool { |
| (**self).is_quit_state(id) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn is_match_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool { |
| (**self).is_match_state(id) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn is_start_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool { |
| (**self).is_start_state(id) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn is_accel_state(&self, id: StateID) -> bool { |
| (**self).is_accel_state(id) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn pattern_len(&self) -> usize { |
| (**self).pattern_len() |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn match_len(&self, id: StateID) -> usize { |
| (**self).match_len(id) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn match_pattern(&self, id: StateID, index: usize) -> PatternID { |
| (**self).match_pattern(id, index) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn has_empty(&self) -> bool { |
| (**self).has_empty() |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn is_utf8(&self) -> bool { |
| (**self).is_utf8() |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn is_always_start_anchored(&self) -> bool { |
| (**self).is_always_start_anchored() |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn accelerator(&self, id: StateID) -> &[u8] { |
| (**self).accelerator(id) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn get_prefilter(&self) -> Option<&Prefilter> { |
| (**self).get_prefilter() |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_search_fwd( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| ) -> Result<Option<HalfMatch>, MatchError> { |
| (**self).try_search_fwd(input) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_search_rev( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| ) -> Result<Option<HalfMatch>, MatchError> { |
| (**self).try_search_rev(input) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_search_overlapping_fwd( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| state: &mut OverlappingState, |
| ) -> Result<(), MatchError> { |
| (**self).try_search_overlapping_fwd(input, state) |
| } |
| |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_search_overlapping_rev( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| state: &mut OverlappingState, |
| ) -> Result<(), MatchError> { |
| (**self).try_search_overlapping_rev(input, state) |
| } |
| |
| #[cfg(feature = "alloc")] |
| #[inline] |
| fn try_which_overlapping_matches( |
| &self, |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| patset: &mut PatternSet, |
| ) -> Result<(), MatchError> { |
| (**self).try_which_overlapping_matches(input, patset) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Represents the current state of an overlapping search. |
| /// |
| /// This is used for overlapping searches since they need to know something |
| /// about the previous search. For example, when multiple patterns match at the |
| /// same position, this state tracks the last reported pattern so that the next |
| /// search knows whether to report another matching pattern or continue with |
| /// the search at the next position. Additionally, it also tracks which state |
| /// the last search call terminated in. |
| /// |
| /// This type provides little introspection capabilities. The only thing a |
| /// caller can do is construct it and pass it around to permit search routines |
| /// to use it to track state, and also ask whether a match has been found. |
| /// |
| /// Callers should always provide a fresh state constructed via |
| /// [`OverlappingState::start`] when starting a new search. Reusing state from |
| /// a previous search may result in incorrect results. |
| #[derive(Clone, Debug, Eq, PartialEq)] |
| pub struct OverlappingState { |
| /// The match reported by the most recent overlapping search to use this |
| /// state. |
| /// |
| /// If a search does not find any matches, then it is expected to clear |
| /// this value. |
| pub(crate) mat: Option<HalfMatch>, |
| /// The state ID of the state at which the search was in when the call |
| /// terminated. When this is a match state, `last_match` must be set to a |
| /// non-None value. |
| /// |
| /// A `None` value indicates the start state of the corresponding |
| /// automaton. We cannot use the actual ID, since any one automaton may |
| /// have many start states, and which one is in use depends on several |
| /// search-time factors. |
| pub(crate) id: Option<StateID>, |
| /// The position of the search. |
| /// |
| /// When `id` is None (i.e., we are starting a search), this is set to |
| /// the beginning of the search as given by the caller regardless of its |
| /// current value. Subsequent calls to an overlapping search pick up at |
| /// this offset. |
| pub(crate) at: usize, |
| /// The index into the matching patterns of the next match to report if the |
| /// current state is a match state. Note that this may be 1 greater than |
| /// the total number of matches to report for the current match state. (In |
| /// which case, no more matches should be reported at the current position |
| /// and the search should advance to the next position.) |
| pub(crate) next_match_index: Option<usize>, |
| /// This is set to true when a reverse overlapping search has entered its |
| /// EOI transitions. |
| /// |
| /// This isn't used in a forward search because it knows to stop once the |
| /// position exceeds the end of the search range. In a reverse search, |
| /// since we use unsigned offsets, we don't "know" once we've gone past |
| /// `0`. So the only way to detect it is with this extra flag. The reverse |
| /// overlapping search knows to terminate specifically after it has |
| /// reported all matches after following the EOI transition. |
| pub(crate) rev_eoi: bool, |
| } |
| |
| impl OverlappingState { |
| /// Create a new overlapping state that begins at the start state of any |
| /// automaton. |
| pub fn start() -> OverlappingState { |
| OverlappingState { |
| mat: None, |
| id: None, |
| at: 0, |
| next_match_index: None, |
| rev_eoi: false, |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Return the match result of the most recent search to execute with this |
| /// state. |
| /// |
| /// A searches will clear this result automatically, such that if no |
| /// match is found, this will correctly report `None`. |
| pub fn get_match(&self) -> Option<HalfMatch> { |
| self.mat |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// An error that can occur when computing the start state for a search. |
| /// |
| /// Computing a start state can fail for a few reasons, either based on |
| /// incorrect configuration or even based on whether the look-behind byte |
| /// triggers a quit state. Typically one does not need to handle this error |
| /// if you're using [`Automaton::start_state_forward`] (or its reverse |
| /// counterpart), as that routine automatically converts `StartError` to a |
| /// [`MatchError`] for you. |
| /// |
| /// This error may be returned by the [`Automaton::start_state`] routine. |
| /// |
| /// This error implements the `std::error::Error` trait when the `std` feature |
| /// is enabled. |
| /// |
| /// This error is marked as non-exhaustive. New variants may be added in a |
| /// semver compatible release. |
| #[non_exhaustive] |
| #[derive(Clone, Debug)] |
| pub enum StartError { |
| /// An error that occurs when a starting configuration's look-behind byte |
| /// is in this DFA's quit set. |
| Quit { |
| /// The quit byte that was found. |
| byte: u8, |
| }, |
| /// An error that occurs when the caller requests an anchored mode that |
| /// isn't supported by the DFA. |
| UnsupportedAnchored { |
| /// The anchored mode given that is unsupported. |
| mode: Anchored, |
| }, |
| } |
| |
| impl StartError { |
| pub(crate) fn quit(byte: u8) -> StartError { |
| StartError::Quit { byte } |
| } |
| |
| pub(crate) fn unsupported_anchored(mode: Anchored) -> StartError { |
| StartError::UnsupportedAnchored { mode } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #[cfg(feature = "std")] |
| impl std::error::Error for StartError {} |
| |
| impl core::fmt::Display for StartError { |
| fn fmt(&self, f: &mut core::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> core::fmt::Result { |
| match *self { |
| StartError::Quit { byte } => write!( |
| f, |
| "error computing start state because the look-behind byte \ |
| {:?} triggered a quit state", |
| crate::util::escape::DebugByte(byte), |
| ), |
| StartError::UnsupportedAnchored { mode: Anchored::Yes } => { |
| write!( |
| f, |
| "error computing start state because \ |
| anchored searches are not supported or enabled" |
| ) |
| } |
| StartError::UnsupportedAnchored { mode: Anchored::No } => { |
| write!( |
| f, |
| "error computing start state because \ |
| unanchored searches are not supported or enabled" |
| ) |
| } |
| StartError::UnsupportedAnchored { |
| mode: Anchored::Pattern(pid), |
| } => { |
| write!( |
| f, |
| "error computing start state because \ |
| anchored searches for a specific pattern ({}) \ |
| are not supported or enabled", |
| pid.as_usize(), |
| ) |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// Runs the given overlapping `search` function (forwards or backwards) until |
| /// a match is found whose offset does not split a codepoint. |
| /// |
| /// This is *not* always correct to call. It should only be called when the DFA |
| /// has UTF-8 mode enabled *and* it can produce zero-width matches. Calling |
| /// this when both of those things aren't true might result in legitimate |
| /// matches getting skipped. |
| #[cold] |
| #[inline(never)] |
| fn skip_empty_utf8_splits_overlapping<F>( |
| input: &Input<'_>, |
| state: &mut OverlappingState, |
| mut search: F, |
| ) -> Result<(), MatchError> |
| where |
| F: FnMut(&Input<'_>, &mut OverlappingState) -> Result<(), MatchError>, |
| { |
| // Note that this routine works for forwards and reverse searches |
| // even though there's no code here to handle those cases. That's |
| // because overlapping searches drive themselves to completion via |
| // `OverlappingState`. So all we have to do is push it until no matches are |
| // found. |
| |
| let mut hm = match state.get_match() { |
| None => return Ok(()), |
| Some(hm) => hm, |
| }; |
| if input.get_anchored().is_anchored() { |
| if !input.is_char_boundary(hm.offset()) { |
| state.mat = None; |
| } |
| return Ok(()); |
| } |
| while !input.is_char_boundary(hm.offset()) { |
| search(input, state)?; |
| hm = match state.get_match() { |
| None => return Ok(()), |
| Some(hm) => hm, |
| }; |
| } |
| Ok(()) |
| } |
| |
| /// Write a prefix "state" indicator for fmt::Debug impls. |
| /// |
| /// Specifically, this tries to succinctly distinguish the different types of |
| /// states: dead states, quit states, accelerated states, start states and |
| /// match states. It even accounts for the possible overlappings of different |
| /// state types. |
| pub(crate) fn fmt_state_indicator<A: Automaton>( |
| f: &mut core::fmt::Formatter<'_>, |
| dfa: A, |
| id: StateID, |
| ) -> core::fmt::Result { |
| if dfa.is_dead_state(id) { |
| write!(f, "D")?; |
| if dfa.is_start_state(id) { |
| write!(f, ">")?; |
| } else { |
| write!(f, " ")?; |
| } |
| } else if dfa.is_quit_state(id) { |
| write!(f, "Q ")?; |
| } else if dfa.is_start_state(id) { |
| if dfa.is_accel_state(id) { |
| write!(f, "A>")?; |
| } else { |
| write!(f, " >")?; |
| } |
| } else if dfa.is_match_state(id) { |
| if dfa.is_accel_state(id) { |
| write!(f, "A*")?; |
| } else { |
| write!(f, " *")?; |
| } |
| } else if dfa.is_accel_state(id) { |
| write!(f, "A ")?; |
| } else { |
| write!(f, " ")?; |
| } |
| Ok(()) |
| } |
| |
| #[cfg(all(test, feature = "syntax", feature = "dfa-build"))] |
| mod tests { |
| // A basic test ensuring that our Automaton trait is object safe. (This is |
| // the main reason why we don't define the search routines as generic over |
| // Into<Input>.) |
| #[test] |
| fn object_safe() { |
| use crate::{ |
| dfa::{dense, Automaton}, |
| HalfMatch, Input, |
| }; |
| |
| let dfa = dense::DFA::new("abc").unwrap(); |
| let dfa: &dyn Automaton = &dfa; |
| assert_eq!( |
| Ok(Some(HalfMatch::must(0, 6))), |
| dfa.try_search_fwd(&Input::new(b"xyzabcxyz")), |
| ); |
| } |
| } |