slre/README.md

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SLRE: Super Light Regular Expression library
============================================
2013-07-29 08:56:19 +00:00
SLRE is an ISO C library that implements a subset of Perl regular
expression syntax. Main focus of SLRE is small size, [simple
API](https://github.com/cesanta/slre/blob/master/slre.h), clarity of code
and extensibility. It is making it perfect for tasks like parsing network
requests, configuration files, user input, etc, when libraries like
[PCRE](http://pcre.org) are too heavyweight for the given task. Developers in
embedded would benefit most.
Extensibility is another great aspect of SLRE. For example, if one wants to
introduce a new metacharacter, '\i', meaning 'IPv4 address', it is easy to do
so with SLRE.
## Supported Syntax
^ Match beginning of a buffer
$ Match end of a buffer
() Grouping and substring capturing
\s Match whitespace
\S Match non-whitespace
\d Match decimal digit
+ Match one or more times (greedy)
+? Match one or more times (non-greedy)
* Match zero or more times (greedy)
*? Match zero or more times (non-greedy)
? Match zero or once
x|y Match x or y (alternation operator)
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\meta Match one of the meta character: ^$().[]*+?|\
Not supported but in progress:
[...] Match any character from set
[^...] Match any character but ones from set
\xDD Match byte with hex value 0xDD
## API
int slre_match(const char *regexp, const char *buf, int buf_len,
struct slre_cap *caps, const char **error_msg);
`slre_match()` matches string buffer `buf` of length `buf_len` against
regular expression `regexp`, which should conform the syntax outlined
above. If regular expression `regexp` contains brackets, `slre_match()`
will capture the respective substrings. Array of captures, `caps`,
must have at least as many elements as number of bracket pairs in the `regexp`.
`slre_match()` returns 0 if there is no match found. Otherwise, it returns
the number scanned bytes from the beginning of the string. This way,
it is easy to do repetitive matches. Hint: if it is required to know
the exact matched substring, enclose `regexp` in a brackets and specify `caps`,
which should be an array of following structures:
struct slre_cap {
const char *ptr; /* Points to the matched fragment */
int len; /* Length of the matched fragment */
};
## Example: parsing HTTP request
const char *error_msg, *request = " GET /index.html HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n";
struct slre_cap caps[4];
if (slre_match("^\\s*(\\S+)\\s+(\\S+)\\s+HTTP/(\\d)\\.(\\d)",
request, strlen(request), caps, &error_msg)) {
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printf("Method: [%.*s], URI: [%.*s]\n",
caps[0].len, caps[0].ptr,
caps[1].len, caps[1].ptr);
} else {
printf("Error parsing [%s]: [%s]\n", request, error_msg);
}