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use regex_syntax::ParserBuilder;
/// A common set of configuration options that apply to the syntax of a regex.
///
/// This represents a group of configuration options that specifically apply
/// to how the concrete syntax of a regular expression is interpreted. In
/// particular, they are generally forwarded to the
/// [`ParserBuilder`](https://docs.rs/regex-syntax/*/regex_syntax/struct.ParserBuilder.html)
/// in the
/// [`regex-syntax`](https://docs.rs/regex-syntax)
/// crate when building a regex from its concrete syntax directly.
///
/// These options are defined as a group since they apply to every regex engine
/// in this crate. Instead of re-defining them on every engine's builder, they
/// are instead provided here as one cohesive unit.
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug)]
pub struct SyntaxConfig {
case_insensitive: bool,
multi_line: bool,
dot_matches_new_line: bool,
swap_greed: bool,
ignore_whitespace: bool,
unicode: bool,
utf8: bool,
nest_limit: u32,
octal: bool,
}
impl SyntaxConfig {
/// Return a new default syntax configuration.
pub fn new() -> SyntaxConfig {
// These defaults match the ones used in regex-syntax.
SyntaxConfig {
case_insensitive: false,
multi_line: false,
dot_matches_new_line: false,
swap_greed: false,
ignore_whitespace: false,
unicode: true,
utf8: true,
nest_limit: 250,
octal: false,
}
}
/// Enable or disable the case insensitive flag by default.
///
/// When Unicode mode is enabled, case insensitivity is Unicode-aware.
/// Specifically, it will apply the "simple" case folding rules as
/// specified by Unicode.
///
/// By default this is disabled. It may alternatively be selectively
/// enabled in the regular expression itself via the `i` flag.
pub fn case_insensitive(mut self, yes: bool) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.case_insensitive = yes;
self
}
/// Enable or disable the multi-line matching flag by default.
///
/// When this is enabled, the `^` and `$` look-around assertions will
/// match immediately after and immediately before a new line character,
/// respectively. Note that the `\A` and `\z` look-around assertions are
/// unaffected by this setting and always correspond to matching at the
/// beginning and end of the input.
///
/// By default this is disabled. It may alternatively be selectively
/// enabled in the regular expression itself via the `m` flag.
pub fn multi_line(mut self, yes: bool) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.multi_line = yes;
self
}
/// Enable or disable the "dot matches any character" flag by default.
///
/// When this is enabled, `.` will match any character. When it's disabled,
/// then `.` will match any character except for a new line character.
///
/// Note that `.` is impacted by whether the "unicode" setting is enabled
/// or not. When Unicode is enabled (the defualt), `.` will match any UTF-8
/// encoding of any Unicode scalar value (sans a new line, depending on
/// whether this "dot matches new line" option is enabled). When Unicode
/// mode is disabled, `.` will match any byte instead. Because of this,
/// when Unicode mode is disabled, `.` can only be used when the "allow
/// invalid UTF-8" option is enabled, since `.` could otherwise match
/// invalid UTF-8.
///
/// By default this is disabled. It may alternatively be selectively
/// enabled in the regular expression itself via the `s` flag.
pub fn dot_matches_new_line(mut self, yes: bool) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.dot_matches_new_line = yes;
self
}
/// Enable or disable the "swap greed" flag by default.
///
/// When this is enabled, `.*` (for example) will become ungreedy and `.*?`
/// will become greedy.
///
/// By default this is disabled. It may alternatively be selectively
/// enabled in the regular expression itself via the `U` flag.
pub fn swap_greed(mut self, yes: bool) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.swap_greed = yes;
self
}
/// Enable verbose mode in the regular expression.
///
/// When enabled, verbose mode permits insigificant whitespace in many
/// places in the regular expression, as well as comments. Comments are
/// started using `#` and continue until the end of the line.
///
/// By default, this is disabled. It may be selectively enabled in the
/// regular expression by using the `x` flag regardless of this setting.
pub fn ignore_whitespace(mut self, yes: bool) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.ignore_whitespace = yes;
self
}
/// Enable or disable the Unicode flag (`u`) by default.
///
/// By default this is **enabled**. It may alternatively be selectively
/// disabled in the regular expression itself via the `u` flag.
///
/// Note that unless "allow invalid UTF-8" is enabled (it's disabled by
/// default), a regular expression will fail to parse if Unicode mode is
/// disabled and a sub-expression could possibly match invalid UTF-8.
///
/// **WARNING**: Unicode mode can greatly increase the size of the compiled
/// DFA, which can noticeably impact both memory usage and compilation
/// time. This is especially noticeable if your regex contains character
/// classes like `\w` that are impacted by whether Unicode is enabled or
/// not. If Unicode is not necessary, you are encouraged to disable it.
pub fn unicode(mut self, yes: bool) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.unicode = yes;
self
}
/// When disabled, the builder will permit the construction of a regular
/// expression that may match invalid UTF-8.
///
/// For example, when [`SyntaxConfig::unicode`] is disabled, then
/// expressions like `[^a]` may match invalid UTF-8 since they can match
/// any single byte that is not `a`. By default, these sub-expressions
/// are disallowed to avoid returning offsets that split a UTF-8
/// encoded codepoint. However, in cases where matching at arbitrary
/// locations is desired, this option can be disabled to permit all such
/// sub-expressions.
///
/// When enabled (the default), the builder is guaranteed to produce a
/// regex that will only ever match valid UTF-8 (otherwise, the builder
/// will return an error).
pub fn utf8(mut self, yes: bool) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.utf8 = yes;
self
}
/// Set the nesting limit used for the regular expression parser.
///
/// The nesting limit controls how deep the abstract syntax tree is allowed
/// to be. If the AST exceeds the given limit (e.g., with too many nested
/// groups), then an error is returned by the parser.
///
/// The purpose of this limit is to act as a heuristic to prevent stack
/// overflow when building a finite automaton from a regular expression's
/// abstract syntax tree. In particular, construction currently uses
/// recursion. In the future, the implementation may stop using recursion
/// and this option will no longer be necessary.
///
/// This limit is not checked until the entire AST is parsed. Therefore,
/// if callers want to put a limit on the amount of heap space used, then
/// they should impose a limit on the length, in bytes, of the concrete
/// pattern string. In particular, this is viable since the parser will
/// limit itself to heap space proportional to the lenth of the pattern
/// string.
///
/// Note that a nest limit of `0` will return a nest limit error for most
/// patterns but not all. For example, a nest limit of `0` permits `a` but
/// not `ab`, since `ab` requires a concatenation AST item, which results
/// in a nest depth of `1`. In general, a nest limit is not something that
/// manifests in an obvious way in the concrete syntax, therefore, it
/// should not be used in a granular way.
pub fn nest_limit(mut self, limit: u32) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.nest_limit = limit;
self
}
/// Whether to support octal syntax or not.
///
/// Octal syntax is a little-known way of uttering Unicode codepoints in
/// a regular expression. For example, `a`, `\x61`, `\u0061` and
/// `\141` are all equivalent regular expressions, where the last example
/// shows octal syntax.
///
/// While supporting octal syntax isn't in and of itself a problem, it does
/// make good error messages harder. That is, in PCRE based regex engines,
/// syntax like `\1` invokes a backreference, which is explicitly
/// unsupported in Rust's regex engine. However, many users expect it to
/// be supported. Therefore, when octal support is disabled, the error
/// message will explicitly mention that backreferences aren't supported.
///
/// Octal syntax is disabled by default.
pub fn octal(mut self, yes: bool) -> SyntaxConfig {
self.octal = yes;
self
}
/// Returns whether "unicode" mode is enabled.
pub fn get_unicode(&self) -> bool {
self.unicode
}
/// Returns whether "case insensitive" mode is enabled.
pub fn get_case_insensitive(&self) -> bool {
self.case_insensitive
}
/// Returns whether "multi line" mode is enabled.
pub fn get_multi_line(&self) -> bool {
self.multi_line
}
/// Returns whether "dot matches new line" mode is enabled.
pub fn get_dot_matches_new_line(&self) -> bool {
self.dot_matches_new_line
}
/// Returns whether "swap greed" mode is enabled.
pub fn get_swap_greed(&self) -> bool {
self.swap_greed
}
/// Returns whether "ignore whitespace" mode is enabled.
pub fn get_ignore_whitespace(&self) -> bool {
self.ignore_whitespace
}
/// Returns whether UTF-8 mode is enabled.
pub fn get_utf8(&self) -> bool {
self.utf8
}
/// Returns the "nest limit" setting.
pub fn get_nest_limit(&self) -> u32 {
self.nest_limit
}
/// Returns whether "octal" mode is enabled.
pub fn get_octal(&self) -> bool {
self.octal
}
/// Applies this configuration to the given parser.
pub(crate) fn apply(&self, builder: &mut ParserBuilder) {
builder
.unicode(self.unicode)
.case_insensitive(self.case_insensitive)
.multi_line(self.multi_line)
.dot_matches_new_line(self.dot_matches_new_line)
.swap_greed(self.swap_greed)
.ignore_whitespace(self.ignore_whitespace)
.allow_invalid_utf8(!self.utf8)
.nest_limit(self.nest_limit)
.octal(self.octal);
}
}
impl Default for SyntaxConfig {
fn default() -> SyntaxConfig {
SyntaxConfig::new()
}
}