pcre2build.html 28 KB

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  1. <html>
  2. <head>
  3. <title>pcre2build specification</title>
  4. </head>
  5. <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
  6. <h1>pcre2build man page</h1>
  7. <p>
  8. Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE2 index page</a>.
  9. </p>
  10. <p>
  11. This page is part of the PCRE2 HTML documentation. It was generated
  12. automatically from the original man page. If there is any nonsense in it,
  13. please consult the man page, in case the conversion went wrong.
  14. <br>
  15. <ul>
  16. <li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">BUILDING PCRE2</a>
  17. <li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">PCRE2 BUILD-TIME OPTIONS</a>
  18. <li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">BUILDING 8-BIT, 16-BIT AND 32-BIT LIBRARIES</a>
  19. <li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">BUILDING SHARED AND STATIC LIBRARIES</a>
  20. <li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">UNICODE AND UTF SUPPORT</a>
  21. <li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">DISABLING THE USE OF \C</a>
  22. <li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">JUST-IN-TIME COMPILER SUPPORT</a>
  23. <li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">NEWLINE RECOGNITION</a>
  24. <li><a name="TOC9" href="#SEC9">WHAT \R MATCHES</a>
  25. <li><a name="TOC10" href="#SEC10">HANDLING VERY LARGE PATTERNS</a>
  26. <li><a name="TOC11" href="#SEC11">LIMITING PCRE2 RESOURCE USAGE</a>
  27. <li><a name="TOC12" href="#SEC12">LIMITING VARIABLE-LENGTH LOOKBEHIND ASSERTIONS</a>
  28. <li><a name="TOC13" href="#SEC13">CREATING CHARACTER TABLES AT BUILD TIME</a>
  29. <li><a name="TOC14" href="#SEC14">USING EBCDIC CODE</a>
  30. <li><a name="TOC15" href="#SEC15">PCRE2GREP SUPPORT FOR EXTERNAL SCRIPTS</a>
  31. <li><a name="TOC16" href="#SEC16">PCRE2GREP OPTIONS FOR COMPRESSED FILE SUPPORT</a>
  32. <li><a name="TOC17" href="#SEC17">PCRE2GREP BUFFER SIZE</a>
  33. <li><a name="TOC18" href="#SEC18">PCRE2TEST OPTION FOR LIBREADLINE SUPPORT</a>
  34. <li><a name="TOC19" href="#SEC19">INCLUDING DEBUGGING CODE</a>
  35. <li><a name="TOC20" href="#SEC20">DEBUGGING WITH VALGRIND SUPPORT</a>
  36. <li><a name="TOC21" href="#SEC21">CODE COVERAGE REPORTING</a>
  37. <li><a name="TOC22" href="#SEC22">DISABLING THE Z AND T FORMATTING MODIFIERS</a>
  38. <li><a name="TOC23" href="#SEC23">SUPPORT FOR FUZZERS</a>
  39. <li><a name="TOC24" href="#SEC24">OBSOLETE OPTION</a>
  40. <li><a name="TOC25" href="#SEC25">SEE ALSO</a>
  41. <li><a name="TOC26" href="#SEC26">AUTHOR</a>
  42. <li><a name="TOC27" href="#SEC27">REVISION</a>
  43. </ul>
  44. <br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">BUILDING PCRE2</a><br>
  45. <P>
  46. PCRE2 is distributed with a <b>configure</b> script that can be used to build
  47. the library in Unix-like environments using the applications known as
  48. Autotools. Also in the distribution are files to support building using
  49. <b>CMake</b> instead of <b>configure</b>. The text file
  50. <a href="README.txt"><b>README</b></a>
  51. contains general information about building with Autotools (some of which is
  52. repeated below), and also has some comments about building on various operating
  53. systems. There is a lot more information about building PCRE2 without using
  54. Autotools (including information about using <b>CMake</b> and building "by
  55. hand") in the text file called
  56. <a href="NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD.txt"><b>NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD</b>.</a>
  57. You should consult this file as well as the
  58. <a href="README.txt"><b>README</b></a>
  59. file if you are building in a non-Unix-like environment.
  60. </P>
  61. <br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">PCRE2 BUILD-TIME OPTIONS</a><br>
  62. <P>
  63. The rest of this document describes the optional features of PCRE2 that can be
  64. selected when the library is compiled. It assumes use of the <b>configure</b>
  65. script, where the optional features are selected or deselected by providing
  66. options to <b>configure</b> before running the <b>make</b> command. However, the
  67. same options can be selected in both Unix-like and non-Unix-like environments
  68. if you are using <b>CMake</b> instead of <b>configure</b> to build PCRE2.
  69. </P>
  70. <P>
  71. If you are not using Autotools or <b>CMake</b>, option selection can be done by
  72. editing the <b>config.h</b> file, or by passing parameter settings to the
  73. compiler, as described in
  74. <a href="NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD.txt"><b>NON-AUTOTOOLS-BUILD</b>.</a>
  75. </P>
  76. <P>
  77. The complete list of options for <b>configure</b> (which includes the standard
  78. ones such as the selection of the installation directory) can be obtained by
  79. running
  80. <pre>
  81. ./configure --help
  82. </pre>
  83. The following sections include descriptions of "on/off" options whose names
  84. begin with --enable or --disable. Because of the way that <b>configure</b>
  85. works, --enable and --disable always come in pairs, so the complementary option
  86. always exists as well, but as it specifies the default, it is not described.
  87. Options that specify values have names that start with --with. At the end of a
  88. <b>configure</b> run, a summary of the configuration is output.
  89. </P>
  90. <br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">BUILDING 8-BIT, 16-BIT AND 32-BIT LIBRARIES</a><br>
  91. <P>
  92. By default, a library called <b>libpcre2-8</b> is built, containing functions
  93. that take string arguments contained in arrays of bytes, interpreted either as
  94. single-byte characters, or UTF-8 strings. You can also build two other
  95. libraries, called <b>libpcre2-16</b> and <b>libpcre2-32</b>, which process
  96. strings that are contained in arrays of 16-bit and 32-bit code units,
  97. respectively. These can be interpreted either as single-unit characters or
  98. UTF-16/UTF-32 strings. To build these additional libraries, add one or both of
  99. the following to the <b>configure</b> command:
  100. <pre>
  101. --enable-pcre2-16
  102. --enable-pcre2-32
  103. </pre>
  104. If you do not want the 8-bit library, add
  105. <pre>
  106. --disable-pcre2-8
  107. </pre>
  108. as well. At least one of the three libraries must be built. Note that the POSIX
  109. wrapper is for the 8-bit library only, and that <b>pcre2grep</b> is an 8-bit
  110. program. Neither of these are built if you select only the 16-bit or 32-bit
  111. libraries.
  112. </P>
  113. <br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">BUILDING SHARED AND STATIC LIBRARIES</a><br>
  114. <P>
  115. The Autotools PCRE2 building process uses <b>libtool</b> to build both shared
  116. and static libraries by default. You can suppress an unwanted library by adding
  117. one of
  118. <pre>
  119. --disable-shared
  120. --disable-static
  121. </pre>
  122. to the <b>configure</b> command. Setting --disable-shared ensures that PCRE2
  123. libraries are built as static libraries. The binaries that are then created as
  124. part of the build process (for example, <b>pcre2test</b> and <b>pcre2grep</b>)
  125. are linked statically with one or more PCRE2 libraries, but may also be
  126. dynamically linked with other libraries such as <b>libc</b>. If you want these
  127. binaries to be fully statically linked, you can set LDFLAGS like this:
  128. <br>
  129. <br>
  130. LDFLAGS=--static ./configure --disable-shared
  131. <br>
  132. <br>
  133. Note the two hyphens in --static. Of course, this works only if static versions
  134. of all the relevant libraries are available for linking.
  135. </P>
  136. <br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">UNICODE AND UTF SUPPORT</a><br>
  137. <P>
  138. By default, PCRE2 is built with support for Unicode and UTF character strings.
  139. To build it without Unicode support, add
  140. <pre>
  141. --disable-unicode
  142. </pre>
  143. to the <b>configure</b> command. This setting applies to all three libraries. It
  144. is not possible to build one library with Unicode support and another without
  145. in the same configuration.
  146. </P>
  147. <P>
  148. Of itself, Unicode support does not make PCRE2 treat strings as UTF-8, UTF-16
  149. or UTF-32. To do that, applications that use the library can set the PCRE2_UTF
  150. option when they call <b>pcre2_compile()</b> to compile a pattern.
  151. Alternatively, patterns may be started with (*UTF) unless the application has
  152. locked this out by setting PCRE2_NEVER_UTF.
  153. </P>
  154. <P>
  155. UTF support allows the libraries to process character code points up to
  156. 0x10ffff in the strings that they handle. Unicode support also gives access to
  157. the Unicode properties of characters, using pattern escapes such as \P, \p,
  158. and \X. Only the general category properties such as <i>Lu</i> and <i>Nd</i>,
  159. script names, and some bi-directional properties are supported. Details are
  160. given in the
  161. <a href="pcre2pattern.html"><b>pcre2pattern</b></a>
  162. documentation.
  163. </P>
  164. <P>
  165. Pattern escapes such as \d and \w do not by default make use of Unicode
  166. properties. The application can request that they do by setting the PCRE2_UCP
  167. option. Unless the application has set PCRE2_NEVER_UCP, a pattern may also
  168. request this by starting with (*UCP).
  169. </P>
  170. <br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">DISABLING THE USE OF \C</a><br>
  171. <P>
  172. The \C escape sequence, which matches a single code unit, even in a UTF mode,
  173. can cause unpredictable behaviour because it may leave the current matching
  174. point in the middle of a multi-code-unit character. The application can lock it
  175. out by setting the PCRE2_NEVER_BACKSLASH_C option when calling
  176. <b>pcre2_compile()</b>. There is also a build-time option
  177. <pre>
  178. --enable-never-backslash-C
  179. </pre>
  180. (note the upper case C) which locks out the use of \C entirely.
  181. </P>
  182. <br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">JUST-IN-TIME COMPILER SUPPORT</a><br>
  183. <P>
  184. Just-in-time (JIT) compiler support is included in the build by specifying
  185. <pre>
  186. --enable-jit
  187. </pre>
  188. This support is available only for certain hardware architectures. If this
  189. option is set for an unsupported architecture, a building error occurs.
  190. If in doubt, use
  191. <pre>
  192. --enable-jit=auto
  193. </pre>
  194. which enables JIT only if the current hardware is supported. You can check
  195. if JIT is enabled in the configuration summary that is output at the end of a
  196. <b>configure</b> run. If you are enabling JIT under SELinux you may also want to
  197. add
  198. <pre>
  199. --enable-jit-sealloc
  200. </pre>
  201. which enables the use of an execmem allocator in JIT that is compatible with
  202. SELinux. This has no effect if JIT is not enabled. See the
  203. <a href="pcre2jit.html"><b>pcre2jit</b></a>
  204. documentation for a discussion of JIT usage. When JIT support is enabled,
  205. <b>pcre2grep</b> automatically makes use of it, unless you add
  206. <pre>
  207. --disable-pcre2grep-jit
  208. </pre>
  209. to the <b>configure</b> command.
  210. </P>
  211. <br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">NEWLINE RECOGNITION</a><br>
  212. <P>
  213. By default, PCRE2 interprets the linefeed (LF) character as indicating the end
  214. of a line. This is the normal newline character on Unix-like systems. You can
  215. compile PCRE2 to use carriage return (CR) instead, by adding
  216. <pre>
  217. --enable-newline-is-cr
  218. </pre>
  219. to the <b>configure</b> command. There is also an --enable-newline-is-lf option,
  220. which explicitly specifies linefeed as the newline character.
  221. </P>
  222. <P>
  223. Alternatively, you can specify that line endings are to be indicated by the
  224. two-character sequence CRLF (CR immediately followed by LF). If you want this,
  225. add
  226. <pre>
  227. --enable-newline-is-crlf
  228. </pre>
  229. to the <b>configure</b> command. There is a fourth option, specified by
  230. <pre>
  231. --enable-newline-is-anycrlf
  232. </pre>
  233. which causes PCRE2 to recognize any of the three sequences CR, LF, or CRLF as
  234. indicating a line ending. A fifth option, specified by
  235. <pre>
  236. --enable-newline-is-any
  237. </pre>
  238. causes PCRE2 to recognize any Unicode newline sequence. The Unicode newline
  239. sequences are the three just mentioned, plus the single characters VT (vertical
  240. tab, U+000B), FF (form feed, U+000C), NEL (next line, U+0085), LS (line
  241. separator, U+2028), and PS (paragraph separator, U+2029). The final option is
  242. <pre>
  243. --enable-newline-is-nul
  244. </pre>
  245. which causes NUL (binary zero) to be set as the default line-ending character.
  246. </P>
  247. <P>
  248. Whatever default line ending convention is selected when PCRE2 is built can be
  249. overridden by applications that use the library. At build time it is
  250. recommended to use the standard for your operating system.
  251. </P>
  252. <br><a name="SEC9" href="#TOC1">WHAT \R MATCHES</a><br>
  253. <P>
  254. By default, the sequence \R in a pattern matches any Unicode newline sequence,
  255. independently of what has been selected as the line ending sequence. If you
  256. specify
  257. <pre>
  258. --enable-bsr-anycrlf
  259. </pre>
  260. the default is changed so that \R matches only CR, LF, or CRLF. Whatever is
  261. selected when PCRE2 is built can be overridden by applications that use the
  262. library.
  263. </P>
  264. <br><a name="SEC10" href="#TOC1">HANDLING VERY LARGE PATTERNS</a><br>
  265. <P>
  266. Within a compiled pattern, offset values are used to point from one part to
  267. another (for example, from an opening parenthesis to an alternation
  268. metacharacter). By default, in the 8-bit and 16-bit libraries, two-byte values
  269. are used for these offsets, leading to a maximum size for a compiled pattern of
  270. around 64 thousand code units. This is sufficient to handle all but the most
  271. gigantic patterns. Nevertheless, some people do want to process truly enormous
  272. patterns, so it is possible to compile PCRE2 to use three-byte or four-byte
  273. offsets by adding a setting such as
  274. <pre>
  275. --with-link-size=3
  276. </pre>
  277. to the <b>configure</b> command. The value given must be 2, 3, or 4. For the
  278. 16-bit library, a value of 3 is rounded up to 4. In these libraries, using
  279. longer offsets slows down the operation of PCRE2 because it has to load
  280. additional data when handling them. For the 32-bit library the value is always
  281. 4 and cannot be overridden; the value of --with-link-size is ignored.
  282. </P>
  283. <br><a name="SEC11" href="#TOC1">LIMITING PCRE2 RESOURCE USAGE</a><br>
  284. <P>
  285. The <b>pcre2_match()</b> function increments a counter each time it goes round
  286. its main loop. Putting a limit on this counter controls the amount of computing
  287. resource used by a single call to <b>pcre2_match()</b>. The limit can be changed
  288. at run time, as described in the
  289. <a href="pcre2api.html"><b>pcre2api</b></a>
  290. documentation. The default is 10 million, but this can be changed by adding a
  291. setting such as
  292. <pre>
  293. --with-match-limit=500000
  294. </pre>
  295. to the <b>configure</b> command. This setting also applies to the
  296. <b>pcre2_dfa_match()</b> matching function, and to JIT matching (though the
  297. counting is done differently).
  298. </P>
  299. <P>
  300. The <b>pcre2_match()</b> function uses heap memory to record backtracking
  301. points. The more nested backtracking points there are (that is, the deeper the
  302. search tree), the more memory is needed. There is an upper limit, specified in
  303. kibibytes (units of 1024 bytes). This limit can be changed at run time, as
  304. described in the
  305. <a href="pcre2api.html"><b>pcre2api</b></a>
  306. documentation. The default limit (in effect unlimited) is 20 million. You can
  307. change this by a setting such as
  308. <pre>
  309. --with-heap-limit=500
  310. </pre>
  311. which limits the amount of heap to 500 KiB. This limit applies only to
  312. interpretive matching in <b>pcre2_match()</b> and <b>pcre2_dfa_match()</b>, which
  313. may also use the heap for internal workspace when processing complicated
  314. patterns. This limit does not apply when JIT (which has its own memory
  315. arrangements) is used.
  316. </P>
  317. <P>
  318. You can also explicitly limit the depth of nested backtracking in the
  319. <b>pcre2_match()</b> interpreter. This limit defaults to the value that is set
  320. for --with-match-limit. You can set a lower default limit by adding, for
  321. example,
  322. <pre>
  323. --with-match-limit-depth=10000
  324. </pre>
  325. to the <b>configure</b> command. This value can be overridden at run time. This
  326. depth limit indirectly limits the amount of heap memory that is used, but
  327. because the size of each backtracking "frame" depends on the number of
  328. capturing parentheses in a pattern, the amount of heap that is used before the
  329. limit is reached varies from pattern to pattern. This limit was more useful in
  330. versions before 10.30, where function recursion was used for backtracking.
  331. </P>
  332. <P>
  333. As well as applying to <b>pcre2_match()</b>, the depth limit also controls
  334. the depth of recursive function calls in <b>pcre2_dfa_match()</b>. These are
  335. used for lookaround assertions, atomic groups, and recursion within patterns.
  336. The limit does not apply to JIT matching.
  337. </P>
  338. <br><a name="SEC12" href="#TOC1">LIMITING VARIABLE-LENGTH LOOKBEHIND ASSERTIONS</a><br>
  339. <P>
  340. Lookbehind assertions in which one or more branches can match a variable number
  341. of characters are supported only if there is a maximum matching length for each
  342. top-level branch. There is a limit to this maximum that defaults to 255
  343. characters. You can alter this default by a setting such as
  344. <pre>
  345. --with-max-varlookbehind=100
  346. </pre>
  347. The limit can be changed at runtime by calling
  348. <b>pcre2_set_max_varlookbehind()</b>. Lookbehind assertions in which every
  349. branch matches a fixed number of characters (not necessarily all the same) are
  350. not constrained by this limit.
  351. <a name="createtables"></a></P>
  352. <br><a name="SEC13" href="#TOC1">CREATING CHARACTER TABLES AT BUILD TIME</a><br>
  353. <P>
  354. PCRE2 uses fixed tables for processing characters whose code points are less
  355. than 256. By default, PCRE2 is built with a set of tables that are distributed
  356. in the file <i>src/pcre2_chartables.c.dist</i>. These tables are for ASCII codes
  357. only. If you add
  358. <pre>
  359. --enable-rebuild-chartables
  360. </pre>
  361. to the <b>configure</b> command, the distributed tables are no longer used.
  362. Instead, a program called <b>pcre2_dftables</b> is compiled and run. This
  363. outputs the source for new set of tables, created in the default locale of your
  364. C run-time system. This method of replacing the tables does not work if you are
  365. cross compiling, because <b>pcre2_dftables</b> needs to be run on the local
  366. host and therefore not compiled with the cross compiler.
  367. </P>
  368. <P>
  369. If you need to create alternative tables when cross compiling, you will have to
  370. do so "by hand". There may also be other reasons for creating tables manually.
  371. To cause <b>pcre2_dftables</b> to be built on the local host, run a normal
  372. compiling command, and then run the program with the output file as its
  373. argument, for example:
  374. <pre>
  375. cc src/pcre2_dftables.c -o pcre2_dftables
  376. ./pcre2_dftables src/pcre2_chartables.c
  377. </pre>
  378. This builds the tables in the default locale of the local host. If you want to
  379. specify a locale, you must use the -L option:
  380. <pre>
  381. LC_ALL=fr_FR ./pcre2_dftables -L src/pcre2_chartables.c
  382. </pre>
  383. You can also specify -b (with or without -L). This causes the tables to be
  384. written in binary instead of as source code. A set of binary tables can be
  385. loaded into memory by an application and passed to <b>pcre2_compile()</b> in the
  386. same way as tables created by calling <b>pcre2_maketables()</b>. The tables are
  387. just a string of bytes, independent of hardware characteristics such as
  388. endianness. This means they can be bundled with an application that runs in
  389. different environments, to ensure consistent behaviour.
  390. </P>
  391. <br><a name="SEC14" href="#TOC1">USING EBCDIC CODE</a><br>
  392. <P>
  393. PCRE2 assumes by default that it will run in an environment where the character
  394. code is ASCII or Unicode, which is a superset of ASCII. This is the case for
  395. most computer operating systems. PCRE2 can, however, be compiled to run in an
  396. 8-bit EBCDIC environment by adding
  397. <pre>
  398. --enable-ebcdic --disable-unicode
  399. </pre>
  400. to the <b>configure</b> command. This setting implies
  401. --enable-rebuild-chartables. You should only use it if you know that you are in
  402. an EBCDIC environment (for example, an IBM mainframe operating system).
  403. </P>
  404. <P>
  405. It is not possible to support both EBCDIC and UTF-8 codes in the same version
  406. of the library. Consequently, --enable-unicode and --enable-ebcdic are mutually
  407. exclusive.
  408. </P>
  409. <P>
  410. The EBCDIC character that corresponds to an ASCII LF is assumed to have the
  411. value 0x15 by default. However, in some EBCDIC environments, 0x25 is used. In
  412. such an environment you should use
  413. <pre>
  414. --enable-ebcdic-nl25
  415. </pre>
  416. as well as, or instead of, --enable-ebcdic. The EBCDIC character for CR has the
  417. same value as in ASCII, namely, 0x0d. Whichever of 0x15 and 0x25 is <i>not</i>
  418. chosen as LF is made to correspond to the Unicode NEL character (which, in
  419. Unicode, is 0x85).
  420. </P>
  421. <P>
  422. The options that select newline behaviour, such as --enable-newline-is-cr,
  423. and equivalent run-time options, refer to these character values in an EBCDIC
  424. environment.
  425. </P>
  426. <br><a name="SEC15" href="#TOC1">PCRE2GREP SUPPORT FOR EXTERNAL SCRIPTS</a><br>
  427. <P>
  428. By default <b>pcre2grep</b> supports the use of callouts with string arguments
  429. within the patterns it is matching. There are two kinds: one that generates
  430. output using local code, and another that calls an external program or script.
  431. If --disable-pcre2grep-callout-fork is added to the <b>configure</b> command,
  432. only the first kind of callout is supported; if --disable-pcre2grep-callout is
  433. used, all callouts are completely ignored. For more details of <b>pcre2grep</b>
  434. callouts, see the
  435. <a href="pcre2grep.html"><b>pcre2grep</b></a>
  436. documentation.
  437. </P>
  438. <br><a name="SEC16" href="#TOC1">PCRE2GREP OPTIONS FOR COMPRESSED FILE SUPPORT</a><br>
  439. <P>
  440. By default, <b>pcre2grep</b> reads all files as plain text. You can build it so
  441. that it recognizes files whose names end in <b>.gz</b> or <b>.bz2</b>, and reads
  442. them with <b>libz</b> or <b>libbz2</b>, respectively, by adding one or both of
  443. <pre>
  444. --enable-pcre2grep-libz
  445. --enable-pcre2grep-libbz2
  446. </pre>
  447. to the <b>configure</b> command. These options naturally require that the
  448. relevant libraries are installed on your system. Configuration will fail if
  449. they are not.
  450. </P>
  451. <br><a name="SEC17" href="#TOC1">PCRE2GREP BUFFER SIZE</a><br>
  452. <P>
  453. <b>pcre2grep</b> uses an internal buffer to hold a "window" on the file it is
  454. scanning, in order to be able to output "before" and "after" lines when it
  455. finds a match. The default starting size of the buffer is 20KiB. The buffer
  456. itself is three times this size, but because of the way it is used for holding
  457. "before" lines, the longest line that is guaranteed to be processable is the
  458. notional buffer size. If a longer line is encountered, <b>pcre2grep</b>
  459. automatically expands the buffer, up to a specified maximum size, whose default
  460. is 1MiB or the starting size, whichever is the larger. You can change the
  461. default parameter values by adding, for example,
  462. <pre>
  463. --with-pcre2grep-bufsize=51200
  464. --with-pcre2grep-max-bufsize=2097152
  465. </pre>
  466. to the <b>configure</b> command. The caller of <b>pcre2grep</b> can override
  467. these values by using --buffer-size and --max-buffer-size on the command line.
  468. </P>
  469. <br><a name="SEC18" href="#TOC1">PCRE2TEST OPTION FOR LIBREADLINE SUPPORT</a><br>
  470. <P>
  471. If you add one of
  472. <pre>
  473. --enable-pcre2test-libreadline
  474. --enable-pcre2test-libedit
  475. </pre>
  476. to the <b>configure</b> command, <b>pcre2test</b> is linked with the
  477. <b>libreadline</b> or<b>libedit</b> library, respectively, and when its input is
  478. from a terminal, it reads it using the <b>readline()</b> function. This provides
  479. line-editing and history facilities. Note that <b>libreadline</b> is
  480. GPL-licensed, so if you distribute a binary of <b>pcre2test</b> linked in this
  481. way, there may be licensing issues. These can be avoided by linking instead
  482. with <b>libedit</b>, which has a BSD licence.
  483. </P>
  484. <P>
  485. Setting --enable-pcre2test-libreadline causes the <b>-lreadline</b> option to be
  486. added to the <b>pcre2test</b> build. In many operating environments with a
  487. system-installed readline library this is sufficient. However, in some
  488. environments (e.g. if an unmodified distribution version of readline is in
  489. use), some extra configuration may be necessary. The INSTALL file for
  490. <b>libreadline</b> says this:
  491. <pre>
  492. "Readline uses the termcap functions, but does not link with
  493. the termcap or curses library itself, allowing applications
  494. which link with readline the to choose an appropriate library."
  495. </pre>
  496. If your environment has not been set up so that an appropriate library is
  497. automatically included, you may need to add something like
  498. <pre>
  499. LIBS="-ncurses"
  500. </pre>
  501. immediately before the <b>configure</b> command.
  502. </P>
  503. <br><a name="SEC19" href="#TOC1">INCLUDING DEBUGGING CODE</a><br>
  504. <P>
  505. If you add
  506. <pre>
  507. --enable-debug
  508. </pre>
  509. to the <b>configure</b> command, additional debugging code is included in the
  510. build. This feature is intended for use by the PCRE2 maintainers.
  511. </P>
  512. <br><a name="SEC20" href="#TOC1">DEBUGGING WITH VALGRIND SUPPORT</a><br>
  513. <P>
  514. If you add
  515. <pre>
  516. --enable-valgrind
  517. </pre>
  518. to the <b>configure</b> command, PCRE2 will use valgrind annotations to mark
  519. certain memory regions as unaddressable. This allows it to detect invalid
  520. memory accesses, and is mostly useful for debugging PCRE2 itself.
  521. </P>
  522. <br><a name="SEC21" href="#TOC1">CODE COVERAGE REPORTING</a><br>
  523. <P>
  524. If your C compiler is gcc, you can build a version of PCRE2 that can generate a
  525. code coverage report for its test suite. To enable this, you must install
  526. <b>lcov</b> version 1.6 or above. Then specify
  527. <pre>
  528. --enable-coverage
  529. </pre>
  530. to the <b>configure</b> command and build PCRE2 in the usual way.
  531. </P>
  532. <P>
  533. Note that using <b>ccache</b> (a caching C compiler) is incompatible with code
  534. coverage reporting. If you have configured <b>ccache</b> to run automatically
  535. on your system, you must set the environment variable
  536. <pre>
  537. CCACHE_DISABLE=1
  538. </pre>
  539. before running <b>make</b> to build PCRE2, so that <b>ccache</b> is not used.
  540. </P>
  541. <P>
  542. When --enable-coverage is used, the following addition targets are added to the
  543. <i>Makefile</i>:
  544. <pre>
  545. make coverage
  546. </pre>
  547. This creates a fresh coverage report for the PCRE2 test suite. It is equivalent
  548. to running "make coverage-reset", "make coverage-baseline", "make check", and
  549. then "make coverage-report".
  550. <pre>
  551. make coverage-reset
  552. </pre>
  553. This zeroes the coverage counters, but does nothing else.
  554. <pre>
  555. make coverage-baseline
  556. </pre>
  557. This captures baseline coverage information.
  558. <pre>
  559. make coverage-report
  560. </pre>
  561. This creates the coverage report.
  562. <pre>
  563. make coverage-clean-report
  564. </pre>
  565. This removes the generated coverage report without cleaning the coverage data
  566. itself.
  567. <pre>
  568. make coverage-clean-data
  569. </pre>
  570. This removes the captured coverage data without removing the coverage files
  571. created at compile time (*.gcno).
  572. <pre>
  573. make coverage-clean
  574. </pre>
  575. This cleans all coverage data including the generated coverage report. For more
  576. information about code coverage, see the <b>gcov</b> and <b>lcov</b>
  577. documentation.
  578. </P>
  579. <br><a name="SEC22" href="#TOC1">DISABLING THE Z AND T FORMATTING MODIFIERS</a><br>
  580. <P>
  581. The C99 standard defines formatting modifiers z and t for size_t and
  582. ptrdiff_t values, respectively. By default, PCRE2 uses these modifiers in
  583. environments other than old versions of Microsoft Visual Studio when
  584. __STDC_VERSION__ is defined and has a value greater than or equal to 199901L
  585. (indicating support for C99).
  586. However, there is at least one environment that claims to be C99 but does not
  587. support these modifiers. If
  588. <pre>
  589. --disable-percent-zt
  590. </pre>
  591. is specified, no use is made of the z or t modifiers. Instead of %td or %zu,
  592. a suitable format is used depending in the size of long for the platform.
  593. </P>
  594. <br><a name="SEC23" href="#TOC1">SUPPORT FOR FUZZERS</a><br>
  595. <P>
  596. There is a special option for use by people who want to run fuzzing tests on
  597. PCRE2:
  598. <pre>
  599. --enable-fuzz-support
  600. </pre>
  601. At present this applies only to the 8-bit library. If set, it causes an extra
  602. library called libpcre2-fuzzsupport.a to be built, but not installed. This
  603. contains a single function called LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput() whose arguments are
  604. a pointer to a string and the length of the string. When called, this function
  605. tries to compile the string as a pattern, and if that succeeds, to match it.
  606. This is done both with no options and with some random options bits that are
  607. generated from the string.
  608. </P>
  609. <P>
  610. Setting --enable-fuzz-support also causes a binary called <b>pcre2fuzzcheck</b>
  611. to be created. This is normally run under valgrind or used when PCRE2 is
  612. compiled with address sanitizing enabled. It calls the fuzzing function and
  613. outputs information about what it is doing. The input strings are specified by
  614. arguments: if an argument starts with "=" the rest of it is a literal input
  615. string. Otherwise, it is assumed to be a file name, and the contents of the
  616. file are the test string.
  617. </P>
  618. <br><a name="SEC24" href="#TOC1">OBSOLETE OPTION</a><br>
  619. <P>
  620. In versions of PCRE2 prior to 10.30, there were two ways of handling
  621. backtracking in the <b>pcre2_match()</b> function. The default was to use the
  622. system stack, but if
  623. <pre>
  624. --disable-stack-for-recursion
  625. </pre>
  626. was set, memory on the heap was used. From release 10.30 onwards this has
  627. changed (the stack is no longer used) and this option now does nothing except
  628. give a warning.
  629. </P>
  630. <br><a name="SEC25" href="#TOC1">SEE ALSO</a><br>
  631. <P>
  632. <b>pcre2api</b>(3), <b>pcre2-config</b>(3).
  633. </P>
  634. <br><a name="SEC26" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
  635. <P>
  636. Philip Hazel
  637. <br>
  638. Retired from University Computing Service
  639. <br>
  640. Cambridge, England.
  641. <br>
  642. </P>
  643. <br><a name="SEC27" href="#TOC1">REVISION</a><br>
  644. <P>
  645. Last updated: 24 November 2023
  646. <br>
  647. Copyright &copy; 1997-2023 University of Cambridge.
  648. <br>
  649. <p>
  650. Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE2 index page</a>.
  651. </p>