1# regcomp.sym
2#
3# File has two sections, divided by a line of dashes '-'.
4#
5# Lines beginning with # are ignored, except for those that start with #*
6# which are included in pod/perldebguts.pod.  # within a line may be part
7# of a description.
8#
9# First section is for regops, second section is for regmatch-states
10#
11# Note that the order in this file is important.
12#
13# Format for first section:
14# NAME \s+ TYPE, arg-description [struct regnode suffix] [flags] [longjump] ; DESCRIPTION
15#   arg-description is currently unused
16#   suffix is appended to 'struct_regnode_' giving which one to use.  If empty,
17#       it means plain 'struct regnode'.  If the regnode is a string one, this
18#       should instead refer to the base regnode, without the char[1] element
19#       of the structure
20#   flag <S> means is REGNODE_SIMPLE; flag <V> means is REGNODE_VARIES; <.> is
21#       a placeholder
22#   longjump is 1 if the (first) argument holds the next offset (instead of the
23#       usual 'next_offset' field
24#
25# run perl regen.pl after editing this file
26
27#                             +- suffix of which struct regnode to use e.g.,
28#                             | +- flags  (S or V)               struct regnode_1
29#                         un- | | +- longjmp (0, blank, or 1)  blank means 0
30# Name        Type       used | | | ; comment
31# --------------------------------------------------------------------------
32# IFMATCH     BRANCHJ,    off 1 . 1 ; Succeeds if the following matches.
33# UNLESSM     BRANCHJ,    off 1 . 1 ; Fails if the following matches.
34# SUSPEND     BRANCHJ,    off 1 V 1 ; "Independent" sub-RE.
35# IFTHEN      BRANCHJ,    off 1 V 1 ; Switch, should be preceded by switcher.
36# GROUPP      GROUPP,     num 1     ; Whether the group matched.
37#
38# If we were to start running out of regnodes, many of the ones that are
39# complements could be combined with their non-complement mates.  For example,
40# POSIXU could have the flags field have the bottom bit mean do we complement
41# or not, and the type be shifted left 1 bit.  Then all that would be needed to
42# extract which to do is a mask for the complement bit, and a right shift for
43# the other, an inconsequential increase in instructions.  It might actually be
44# clearer and slightly faster given the case statement and assignment are
45# removed.  Note that not everything could be collapsed: NPOSIXA, for example,
46# would require special handling for performance.
47
48
49#* Exit points
50
51END         END,        no        ; End of program.
52SUCCEED     END,        no        ; Return from a subroutine, basically.
53
54#* Line Start Anchors:
55#Note flags field for SBOL indicates if it is a /^/ or a /\A/
56SBOL        BOL,        no        ; Match "" at beginning of line: /^/, /\A/
57MBOL        BOL,        no        ; Same, assuming multiline: /^/m
58
59#* Line End Anchors:
60SEOL        EOL,        no        ; Match "" at end of line: /$/
61MEOL        EOL,        no        ; Same, assuming multiline: /$/m
62EOS         EOL,        no        ; Match "" at end of string: /\z/
63
64#* Match Start Anchors:
65GPOS        GPOS,       no        ; Matches where last m//g left off.
66
67#* Word Boundary Opcodes:
68# The regops that have varieties that vary depending on the character set regex
69# modifiers have to ordered thusly: /d, /l, /u, /a, /aa.  This is because code
70# in regcomp.c uses the enum value of the modifier as an offset from the /d
71# version.  The complements must come after the non-complements.
72# BOUND, POSIX and their complements are affected, as well as EXACTF.
73BOUND       BOUND,      no        ; Like BOUNDA for non-utf8, otherwise like BOUNDU
74BOUNDL      BOUND,      no        ; Like BOUND/BOUNDU, but \w and \W are defined by current locale
75BOUNDU      BOUND,      no        ; Match "" at any boundary of a given type using /u rules.
76BOUNDA      BOUND,      no        ; Match "" at any boundary between \w\W or \W\w, where \w is [_a-zA-Z0-9]
77# All NBOUND nodes are required by code in regexec.c to be greater than all BOUND ones
78NBOUND      NBOUND,     no        ; Like NBOUNDA for non-utf8, otherwise like BOUNDU
79NBOUNDL     NBOUND,     no        ; Like NBOUND/NBOUNDU, but \w and \W are defined by current locale
80NBOUNDU     NBOUND,     no        ; Match "" at any non-boundary of a given type using using /u rules.
81NBOUNDA     NBOUND,     no        ; Match "" betweeen any \w\w or \W\W, where \w is [_a-zA-Z0-9]
82
83#* [Special] alternatives:
84REG_ANY     REG_ANY,    no 0 S    ; Match any one character (except newline).
85SANY        REG_ANY,    no 0 S    ; Match any one character.
86ANYOF       ANYOF,      sv charclass S    ; Match character in (or not in) this class, single char match only
87ANYOFD      ANYOF,      sv charclass S    ; Like ANYOF, but /d is in effect
88ANYOFL      ANYOF,      sv charclass S    ; Like ANYOF, but /l is in effect
89ANYOFPOSIXL ANYOF,      sv charclass_posixl S    ; Like ANYOFL, but matches [[:posix:]] classes
90
91# Must be sequential
92ANYOFH      ANYOF,      sv 1 S    ; Like ANYOF, but only has "High" matches, none in the bitmap; the flags field contains the lowest matchable UTF-8 start byte
93ANYOFHb     ANYOF,      sv 1 S    ; Like ANYOFH, but all matches share the same UTF-8 start byte, given in the flags field
94ANYOFHr     ANYOF,      sv 1 S    ; Like ANYOFH, but the flags field contains packed bounds for all matchable UTF-8 start bytes.
95ANYOFHs     ANYOF,      sv 1 S    ; Like ANYOFHb, but has a string field that gives the leading matchable UTF-8 bytes; flags field is len
96ANYOFR      ANYOFR,     packed 1  S  ; Matches any character in the range given by its packed args: upper 12 bits is the max delta from the base lower 20; the flags field contains the lowest matchable UTF-8 start byte
97ANYOFRb     ANYOFR,     packed 1  S ; Like ANYOFR, but all matches share the same UTF-8 start byte, given in the flags field
98# There is no ANYOFRr because khw doesn't think there are likely to be real-world cases where such a large range is used.
99
100ANYOFM      ANYOFM,     byte 1 S  ; Like ANYOF, but matches an invariant byte as determined by the mask and arg
101NANYOFM     ANYOFM,     byte 1 S  ; complement of ANYOFM
102
103#* POSIX Character Classes:
104# Order of the below is important.  See ordering comment above.
105POSIXD      POSIXD,     none 0 S   ; Some [[:class:]] under /d; the FLAGS field gives which one
106POSIXL      POSIXD,     none 0 S   ; Some [[:class:]] under /l; the FLAGS field gives which one
107POSIXU      POSIXD,     none 0 S   ; Some [[:class:]] under /u; the FLAGS field gives which one
108POSIXA      POSIXD,     none 0 S   ; Some [[:class:]] under /a; the FLAGS field gives which one
109NPOSIXD     NPOSIXD,    none 0 S   ; complement of POSIXD, [[:^class:]]
110NPOSIXL     NPOSIXD,    none 0 S   ; complement of POSIXL, [[:^class:]]
111NPOSIXU     NPOSIXD,    none 0 S   ; complement of POSIXU, [[:^class:]]
112NPOSIXA     NPOSIXD,    none 0 S   ; complement of POSIXA, [[:^class:]]
113# End of order is important
114
115CLUMP       CLUMP,      no 0 V    ; Match any extended grapheme cluster sequence
116
117#* Alternation
118
119#* BRANCH        The set of branches constituting a single choice are
120#*               hooked together with their "next" pointers, since
121#*               precedence prevents anything being concatenated to
122#*               any individual branch.  The "next" pointer of the last
123#*               BRANCH in a choice points to the thing following the
124#*               whole choice.  This is also where the final "next"
125#*               pointer of each individual branch points; each branch
126#*               starts with the operand node of a BRANCH node.
127#*
128BRANCH      BRANCH,     node 0 V  ; Match this alternative, or the next...
129
130#*Literals
131# NOTE: the relative ordering of these types is important do not change it
132
133EXACT       EXACT,      str       ; Match this string (flags field is the length).
134
135#* In a long string node, the U32 argument is the length, and is
136#* immediately followed by the string.
137LEXACT      EXACT,  len:str 1; Match this long string (preceded by length; flags unused).
138EXACTL      EXACT,      str       ; Like EXACT, but /l is in effect (used so locale-related warnings can be checked for)
139EXACTF      EXACT,      str       ; Like EXACT, but match using /id rules; (string not UTF-8, ASCII folded; non-ASCII not)
140EXACTFL     EXACT,      str       ; Like EXACT, but match using /il rules; (string not likely to be folded)
141EXACTFU     EXACT,      str	  ; Like EXACT, but match using /iu rules; (string folded)
142
143# The reason MICRO and SHARP S aren't folded in non-UTF8 patterns is because
144# they would fold to something that requires UTF-8.  SHARP S would normally
145# fold to 'ss', but because of /aa, it instead folds to a pair of LATIN SMALL
146# LETTER LONG S characters (U+017F)
147EXACTFAA    EXACT,      str	  ; Like EXACT, but match using /iaa rules; (string folded except in non-UTF8 patterns: MICRO, SHARP S; folded length <= unfolded)
148
149# End of important relative ordering.
150
151EXACTFUP    EXACT,      str	  ; Like EXACT, but match using /iu rules; (string not UTF-8, folded except MICRO, SHARP S: hence Problematic)
152# In order for a non-UTF-8 EXACTFAA to think the pattern is pre-folded when
153# matching a UTF-8 target string, there would have to be something like an
154# EXACTFAA_MICRO which would not be considered pre-folded for UTF-8 targets,
155# since the fold of the MICRO SIGN would not be done, and would be
156# representable in the UTF-8 target string.
157
158EXACTFLU8   EXACT,      str	  ; Like EXACTFU, but use /il, UTF-8, (string is folded, and everything in it is above 255
159EXACTFAA_NO_TRIE  EXACT, str	  ; Like EXACT, but match using /iaa rules (string not UTF-8, not guaranteed to be folded, not currently trie-able)
160
161
162EXACT_REQ8   EXACT,      str      ; Like EXACT, but only UTF-8 encoded targets can match
163LEXACT_REQ8  EXACT,  len:str 1    ; Like LEXACT, but only UTF-8 encoded targets can match
164EXACTFU_REQ8 EXACT,    str        ; Like EXACTFU, but only UTF-8 encoded targets can match
165# One could add EXACTFAA8 and something that has the same effect for /l,
166# but these would be extremely uncommon
167
168EXACTFU_S_EDGE EXACT,   str       ; /di rules, but nothing in it precludes /ui, except begins and/or ends with [Ss]; (string not UTF-8; compile-time only)
169
170#*Do nothing types
171
172NOTHING     NOTHING,    no        ; Match empty string.
173#*A variant of above which delimits a group, thus stops optimizations
174TAIL        NOTHING,    no        ; Match empty string. Can jump here from outside.
175
176#*Loops
177
178#* STAR,PLUS    '?', and complex '*' and '+', are implemented as
179#*               circular BRANCH structures.  Simple cases
180#*               (one character per match) are implemented with STAR
181#*               and PLUS for speed and to minimize recursive plunges.
182#*
183STAR        STAR,       node 0 V  ; Match this (simple) thing 0 or more times.
184PLUS        PLUS,       node 0 V  ; Match this (simple) thing 1 or more times.
185
186CURLY       CURLY,      sv 2 V    ; Match this simple thing {n,m} times.
187CURLYN      CURLY,      no 2 V    ; Capture next-after-this simple thing
188CURLYM      CURLY,      no 2 V    ; Capture this medium-complex thing {n,m} times.
189CURLYX      CURLY,      sv 2 V    ; Match this complex thing {n,m} times.
190
191#*This terminator creates a loop structure for CURLYX
192WHILEM      WHILEM,     no 0 V    ; Do curly processing and see if rest matches.
193
194#*Buffer related
195
196#*OPEN,CLOSE,GROUPP     ...are numbered at compile time.
197OPEN        OPEN,       num 1     ; Mark this point in input as start of #n.
198CLOSE       CLOSE,      num 1     ; Close corresponding OPEN of #n.
199SROPEN      SROPEN,     none      ; Same as OPEN, but for script run
200SRCLOSE     SRCLOSE,    none      ; Close preceding SROPEN
201
202REF         REF,        num 1 V   ; Match some already matched string
203REFF        REF,        num 1 V   ; Match already matched string, using /di rules.
204REFFL       REF,        num 1 V   ; Match already matched string, using /li rules.
205# N?REFF[AU] could have been implemented using the FLAGS field of the
206# regnode, but by having a separate node type, we can use the existing switch
207# statement to avoid some tests
208REFFU       REF,        num 1 V   ; Match already matched string, usng /ui.
209REFFA       REF,        num 1 V   ; Match already matched string, using /aai rules.
210
211#*Named references.  Code in regcomp.c assumes that these all are after
212#*the numbered references
213REFN        REF,        no-sv 1 V ; Match some already matched string
214REFFN       REF,        no-sv 1 V ; Match already matched string, using /di rules.
215REFFLN      REF,        no-sv 1 V ; Match already matched string, using /li rules.
216REFFUN      REF,        num   1 V ; Match already matched string, using /ui rules.
217REFFAN      REF,        num   1 V ; Match already matched string, using /aai rules.
218
219#*Support for long RE
220LONGJMP     LONGJMP,    off 1 . 1 ; Jump far away.
221BRANCHJ     BRANCHJ,    off 1 V 1 ; BRANCH with long offset.
222
223#*Special Case Regops
224IFMATCH     BRANCHJ,    off 1 . 1 ; Succeeds if the following matches; non-zero flags "f", next_off "o" means lookbehind assertion starting "f..(f-o)" characters before current
225UNLESSM     BRANCHJ,    off 1 . 1 ; Fails if the following matches; non-zero flags "f", next_off "o" means lookbehind assertion starting "f..(f-o)" characters before current
226SUSPEND     BRANCHJ,    off 1 V 1 ; "Independent" sub-RE.
227IFTHEN      BRANCHJ,    off 1 V 1 ; Switch, should be preceded by switcher.
228GROUPP      GROUPP,     num 1     ; Whether the group matched.
229
230#*The heavy worker
231
232EVAL        EVAL,       evl/flags 2L ; Execute some Perl code.
233
234#*Modifiers
235
236MINMOD      MINMOD,     no        ; Next operator is not greedy.
237LOGICAL     LOGICAL,    no        ; Next opcode should set the flag only.
238
239#*This is not used yet
240RENUM       BRANCHJ,    off 1 . 1 ; Group with independently numbered parens.
241
242#*Trie Related
243
244#* Behave the same as A|LIST|OF|WORDS would. The '..C' variants
245#* have inline charclass data (ascii only), the 'C' store it in the
246#* structure.
247# NOTE: the relative order of the TRIE-like regops  is significant
248
249TRIE        TRIE,       trie 1    ; Match many EXACT(F[ALU]?)? at once. flags==type
250TRIEC       TRIE,trie charclass   ; Same as TRIE, but with embedded charclass data
251
252# For start classes, contains an added fail table.
253AHOCORASICK     TRIE,   trie 1    ; Aho Corasick stclass. flags==type
254AHOCORASICKC    TRIE,trie charclass   ; Same as AHOCORASICK, but with embedded charclass data
255
256#*Regex Subroutines
257GOSUB       GOSUB,      num/ofs 2L    ; recurse to paren arg1 at (signed) ofs arg2
258
259#*Special conditionals
260GROUPPN     GROUPPN,    no-sv 1   ; Whether the group matched.
261INSUBP      INSUBP,     num 1     ; Whether we are in a specific recurse.
262DEFINEP     DEFINEP,    none 1    ; Never execute directly.
263
264#*Backtracking Verbs
265ENDLIKE     ENDLIKE,    none      ; Used only for the type field of verbs
266OPFAIL      ENDLIKE,    no-sv 1   ; Same as (?!), but with verb arg
267ACCEPT      ENDLIKE,    no-sv/num 2L   ; Accepts the current matched string, with verbar
268
269#*Verbs With Arguments
270VERB        VERB,       no-sv 1   ; Used only for the type field of verbs
271PRUNE       VERB,       no-sv 1   ; Pattern fails at this startpoint if no-backtracking through this
272MARKPOINT   VERB,       no-sv 1   ; Push the current location for rollback by cut.
273SKIP        VERB,       no-sv 1   ; On failure skip forward (to the mark) before retrying
274COMMIT      VERB,       no-sv 1   ; Pattern fails outright if backtracking through this
275CUTGROUP    VERB,       no-sv 1   ; On failure go to the next alternation in the group
276
277#*Control what to keep in $&.
278KEEPS       KEEPS,      no        ; $& begins here.
279
280#*New charclass like patterns
281LNBREAK     LNBREAK,    none      ; generic newline pattern
282
283# NEW STUFF SOMEWHERE ABOVE THIS LINE
284
285################################################################################
286
287#*SPECIAL  REGOPS
288
289#* This is not really a node, but an optimized away piece of a "long"
290#* node.  To simplify debugging output, we mark it as if it were a node
291OPTIMIZED   NOTHING,    off       ; Placeholder for dump.
292
293#* Special opcode with the property that no opcode in a compiled program
294#* will ever be of this type. Thus it can be used as a flag value that
295#* no other opcode has been seen. END is used similarly, in that an END
296#* node cant be optimized. So END implies "unoptimizable" and PSEUDO
297#* mean "not seen anything to optimize yet".
298PSEUDO      PSEUDO,     off       ; Pseudo opcode for internal use.
299
300REGEX_SET   REGEX_SET,  depth p S ; Regex set, temporary node used in pre-optimization compilation
301
302-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
303# Format for second section:
304# REGOP \t typelist [ \t typelist]
305# typelist= namelist
306#         = namelist:FAIL
307#         = name:count
308
309# Anything below is a state
310#
311#
312TRIE            next:FAIL
313EVAL            B,postponed_AB:FAIL
314CURLYX          end:FAIL
315WHILEM          A_pre,A_min,A_max,B_min,B_max:FAIL
316BRANCH          next:FAIL
317CURLYM          A,B:FAIL
318IFMATCH         A:FAIL
319CURLY           B_min,B_max:FAIL
320COMMIT          next:FAIL
321MARKPOINT       next:FAIL
322SKIP            next:FAIL
323CUTGROUP        next:FAIL
324KEEPS           next:FAIL
325