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  1. News about PCRE releases
  2. ------------------------
  3. Note that this library (now called PCRE1) is now being maintained for bug fixes
  4. only. New projects are advised to use the new PCRE2 libraries.
  5. Release 8.43 23-February-2019
  6. -----------------------------
  7. This is a bug-fix release.
  8. Release 8.42 20-March-2018
  9. --------------------------
  10. This is a bug-fix release.
  11. Release 8.41 13-June-2017
  12. -------------------------
  13. This is a bug-fix release.
  14. Release 8.40 11-January-2017
  15. ----------------------------
  16. This is a bug-fix release.
  17. Release 8.39 14-June-2016
  18. -------------------------
  19. Some appropriate PCRE2 JIT improvements have been retro-fitted to PCRE1. Apart
  20. from that, this is another bug-fix release. Note that this library (now called
  21. PCRE1) is now being maintained for bug fixes only. New projects are advised to
  22. use the new PCRE2 libraries.
  23. Release 8.38 23-November-2015
  24. -----------------------------
  25. This is bug-fix release. Note that this library (now called PCRE1) is now being
  26. maintained for bug fixes only. New projects are advised to use the new PCRE2
  27. libraries.
  28. Release 8.37 28-April-2015
  29. --------------------------
  30. This is bug-fix release. Note that this library (now called PCRE1) is now being
  31. maintained for bug fixes only. New projects are advised to use the new PCRE2
  32. libraries.
  33. Release 8.36 26-September-2014
  34. ------------------------------
  35. This is primarily a bug-fix release. However, in addition, the Unicode data
  36. tables have been updated to Unicode 7.0.0.
  37. Release 8.35 04-April-2014
  38. --------------------------
  39. There have been performance improvements for classes containing non-ASCII
  40. characters and the "auto-possessification" feature has been extended. Other
  41. minor improvements have been implemented and bugs fixed. There is a new callout
  42. feature to enable applications to do detailed stack checks at compile time, to
  43. avoid running out of stack for deeply nested parentheses. The JIT compiler has
  44. been extended with experimental support for ARM-64, MIPS-64, and PPC-LE.
  45. Release 8.34 15-December-2013
  46. -----------------------------
  47. As well as fixing the inevitable bugs, performance has been improved by
  48. refactoring and extending the amount of "auto-possessification" that PCRE does.
  49. Other notable changes:
  50. . Implemented PCRE_INFO_MATCH_EMPTY, which yields 1 if the pattern can match
  51. an empty string. If it can, pcretest shows this in its information output.
  52. . A back reference to a named subpattern when there is more than one of the
  53. same name now checks them in the order in which they appear in the pattern.
  54. The first one that is set is used for the reference. Previously only the
  55. first one was inspected. This change makes PCRE more compatible with Perl.
  56. . Unicode character properties were updated from Unicode 6.3.0.
  57. . The character VT has been added to the set of characters that match \s and
  58. are generally treated as white space, following this same change in Perl
  59. 5.18. There is now no difference between "Perl space" and "POSIX space".
  60. . Perl has changed its handling of \8 and \9. If there is no previously
  61. encountered capturing group of those numbers, they are treated as the
  62. literal characters 8 and 9 instead of a binary zero followed by the
  63. literals. PCRE now does the same.
  64. . Following Perl, added \o{} to specify codepoints in octal, making it
  65. possible to specify values greater than 0777 and also making them
  66. unambiguous.
  67. . In UCP mode, \s was not matching two of the characters that Perl matches,
  68. namely NEL (U+0085) and MONGOLIAN VOWEL SEPARATOR (U+180E), though they
  69. were matched by \h.
  70. . Add JIT support for the 64 bit TileGX architecture.
  71. . Upgraded the handling of the POSIX classes [:graph:], [:print:], and
  72. [:punct:] when PCRE_UCP is set so as to include the same characters as Perl
  73. does in Unicode mode.
  74. . Perl no longer allows group names to start with digits, so I have made this
  75. change also in PCRE.
  76. . Added support for [[:<:]] and [[:>:]] as used in the BSD POSIX library to
  77. mean "start of word" and "end of word", respectively, as a transition aid.
  78. Release 8.33 28-May-2013
  79. --------------------------
  80. A number of bugs are fixed, and some performance improvements have been made.
  81. There are also some new features, of which these are the most important:
  82. . The behaviour of the backtracking verbs has been rationalized and
  83. documented in more detail.
  84. . JIT now supports callouts and all of the backtracking verbs.
  85. . Unicode validation has been updated in the light of Unicode Corrigendum #9,
  86. which points out that "non characters" are not "characters that may not
  87. appear in Unicode strings" but rather "characters that are reserved for
  88. internal use and have only local meaning".
  89. . (*LIMIT_MATCH=d) and (*LIMIT_RECURSION=d) have been added so that the
  90. creator of a pattern can specify lower (but not higher) limits for the
  91. matching process.
  92. . The PCRE_NEVER_UTF option is available to prevent pattern-writers from using
  93. the (*UTF) feature, as this could be a security issue.
  94. Release 8.32 30-November-2012
  95. -----------------------------
  96. This release fixes a number of bugs, but also has some new features. These are
  97. the highlights:
  98. . There is now support for 32-bit character strings and UTF-32. Like the
  99. 16-bit support, this is done by compiling a separate 32-bit library.
  100. . \X now matches a Unicode extended grapheme cluster.
  101. . Case-independent matching of Unicode characters that have more than one
  102. "other case" now makes all three (or more) characters equivalent. This
  103. applies, for example, to Greek Sigma, which has two lowercase versions.
  104. . Unicode character properties are updated to Unicode 6.2.0.
  105. . The EBCDIC support, which had decayed, has had a spring clean.
  106. . A number of JIT optimizations have been added, which give faster JIT
  107. execution speed. In addition, a new direct interface to JIT execution is
  108. available. This bypasses some of the sanity checks of pcre_exec() to give a
  109. noticeable speed-up.
  110. . A number of issues in pcregrep have been fixed, making it more compatible
  111. with GNU grep. In particular, --exclude and --include (and variants) apply
  112. to all files now, not just those obtained from scanning a directory
  113. recursively. In Windows environments, the default action for directories is
  114. now "skip" instead of "read" (which provokes an error).
  115. . If the --only-matching (-o) option in pcregrep is specified multiple
  116. times, each one causes appropriate output. For example, -o1 -o2 outputs the
  117. substrings matched by the 1st and 2nd capturing parentheses. A separating
  118. string can be specified by --om-separator (default empty).
  119. . When PCRE is built via Autotools using a version of gcc that has the
  120. "visibility" feature, it is used to hide internal library functions that are
  121. not part of the public API.
  122. Release 8.31 06-July-2012
  123. -------------------------
  124. This is mainly a bug-fixing release, with a small number of developments:
  125. . The JIT compiler now supports partial matching and the (*MARK) and
  126. (*COMMIT) verbs.
  127. . PCRE_INFO_MAXLOOKBEHIND can be used to find the longest lookbehind in a
  128. pattern.
  129. . There should be a performance improvement when using the heap instead of the
  130. stack for recursion.
  131. . pcregrep can now be linked with libedit as an alternative to libreadline.
  132. . pcregrep now has a --file-list option where the list of files to scan is
  133. given as a file.
  134. . pcregrep now recognizes binary files and there are related options.
  135. . The Unicode tables have been updated to 6.1.0.
  136. As always, the full list of changes is in the ChangeLog file.
  137. Release 8.30 04-February-2012
  138. -----------------------------
  139. Release 8.30 introduces a major new feature: support for 16-bit character
  140. strings, compiled as a separate library. There are a few changes to the
  141. 8-bit library, in addition to some bug fixes.
  142. . The pcre_info() function, which has been obsolete for over 10 years, has
  143. been removed.
  144. . When a compiled pattern was saved to a file and later reloaded on a host
  145. with different endianness, PCRE used automatically to swap the bytes in some
  146. of the data fields. With the advent of the 16-bit library, where more of this
  147. swapping is needed, it is no longer done automatically. Instead, the bad
  148. endianness is detected and a specific error is given. The user can then call
  149. a new function called pcre_pattern_to_host_byte_order() (or an equivalent
  150. 16-bit function) to do the swap.
  151. . In UTF-8 mode, the values 0xd800 to 0xdfff are not legal Unicode
  152. code points and are now faulted. (They are the so-called "surrogates"
  153. that are reserved for coding high values in UTF-16.)
  154. Release 8.21 12-Dec-2011
  155. ------------------------
  156. This is almost entirely a bug-fix release. The only new feature is the ability
  157. to obtain the size of the memory used by the JIT compiler.
  158. Release 8.20 21-Oct-2011
  159. ------------------------
  160. The main change in this release is the inclusion of Zoltan Herczeg's
  161. just-in-time compiler support, which can be accessed by building PCRE with
  162. --enable-jit. Large performance benefits can be had in many situations. 8.20
  163. also fixes an unfortunate bug that was introduced in 8.13 as well as tidying up
  164. a number of infelicities and differences from Perl.
  165. Release 8.13 16-Aug-2011
  166. ------------------------
  167. This is mainly a bug-fix release. There has been a lot of internal refactoring.
  168. The Unicode tables have been updated. The only new feature in the library is
  169. the passing of *MARK information to callouts. Some additions have been made to
  170. pcretest to make testing easier and more comprehensive. There is a new option
  171. for pcregrep to adjust its internal buffer size.
  172. Release 8.12 15-Jan-2011
  173. ------------------------
  174. This release fixes some bugs in pcregrep, one of which caused the tests to fail
  175. on 64-bit big-endian systems. There are no changes to the code of the library.
  176. Release 8.11 10-Dec-2010
  177. ------------------------
  178. A number of bugs in the library and in pcregrep have been fixed. As always, see
  179. ChangeLog for details. The following are the non-bug-fix changes:
  180. . Added --match-limit and --recursion-limit to pcregrep.
  181. . Added an optional parentheses number to the -o and --only-matching options
  182. of pcregrep.
  183. . Changed the way PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD affects the matching of $, \z, \Z, \b, and
  184. \B.
  185. . Added PCRE_ERROR_SHORTUTF8 to make it possible to distinguish between a
  186. bad UTF-8 sequence and one that is incomplete when using PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD.
  187. . Recognize (*NO_START_OPT) at the start of a pattern to set the PCRE_NO_
  188. START_OPTIMIZE option, which is now allowed at compile time
  189. Release 8.10 25-Jun-2010
  190. ------------------------
  191. There are two major additions: support for (*MARK) and friends, and the option
  192. PCRE_UCP, which changes the behaviour of \b, \d, \s, and \w (and their
  193. opposites) so that they make use of Unicode properties. There are also a number
  194. of lesser new features, and several bugs have been fixed. A new option,
  195. --line-buffered, has been added to pcregrep, for use when it is connected to
  196. pipes.
  197. Release 8.02 19-Mar-2010
  198. ------------------------
  199. Another bug-fix release.
  200. Release 8.01 19-Jan-2010
  201. ------------------------
  202. This is a bug-fix release. Several bugs in the code itself and some bugs and
  203. infelicities in the build system have been fixed.
  204. Release 8.00 19-Oct-09
  205. ----------------------
  206. Bugs have been fixed in the library and in pcregrep. There are also some
  207. enhancements. Restrictions on patterns used for partial matching have been
  208. removed, extra information is given for partial matches, the partial matching
  209. process has been improved, and an option to make a partial match override a
  210. full match is available. The "study" process has been enhanced by finding a
  211. lower bound matching length. Groups with duplicate numbers may now have
  212. duplicated names without the use of PCRE_DUPNAMES. However, they may not have
  213. different names. The documentation has been revised to reflect these changes.
  214. The version number has been expanded to 3 digits as it is clear that the rate
  215. of change is not slowing down.
  216. Release 7.9 11-Apr-09
  217. ---------------------
  218. Mostly bugfixes and tidies with just a couple of minor functional additions.
  219. Release 7.8 05-Sep-08
  220. ---------------------
  221. More bug fixes, plus a performance improvement in Unicode character property
  222. lookup.
  223. Release 7.7 07-May-08
  224. ---------------------
  225. This is once again mainly a bug-fix release, but there are a couple of new
  226. features.
  227. Release 7.6 28-Jan-08
  228. ---------------------
  229. The main reason for having this release so soon after 7.5 is because it fixes a
  230. potential buffer overflow problem in pcre_compile() when run in UTF-8 mode. In
  231. addition, the CMake configuration files have been brought up to date.
  232. Release 7.5 10-Jan-08
  233. ---------------------
  234. This is mainly a bug-fix release. However the ability to link pcregrep with
  235. libz or libbz2 and the ability to link pcretest with libreadline have been
  236. added. Also the --line-offsets and --file-offsets options were added to
  237. pcregrep.
  238. Release 7.4 21-Sep-07
  239. ---------------------
  240. The only change of specification is the addition of options to control whether
  241. \R matches any Unicode line ending (the default) or just CR, LF, and CRLF.
  242. Otherwise, the changes are bug fixes and a refactoring to reduce the number of
  243. relocations needed in a shared library. There have also been some documentation
  244. updates, in particular, some more information about using CMake to build PCRE
  245. has been added to the NON-UNIX-USE file.
  246. Release 7.3 28-Aug-07
  247. ---------------------
  248. Most changes are bug fixes. Some that are not:
  249. 1. There is some support for Perl 5.10's experimental "backtracking control
  250. verbs" such as (*PRUNE).
  251. 2. UTF-8 checking is now as per RFC 3629 instead of RFC 2279; this is more
  252. restrictive in the strings it accepts.
  253. 3. Checking for potential integer overflow has been made more dynamic, and as a
  254. consequence there is no longer a hard limit on the size of a subpattern that
  255. has a limited repeat count.
  256. 4. When CRLF is a valid line-ending sequence, pcre_exec() and pcre_dfa_exec()
  257. no longer advance by two characters instead of one when an unanchored match
  258. fails at CRLF if there are explicit CR or LF matches within the pattern.
  259. This gets rid of some anomalous effects that previously occurred.
  260. 5. Some PCRE-specific settings for varying the newline options at the start of
  261. a pattern have been added.
  262. Release 7.2 19-Jun-07
  263. ---------------------
  264. WARNING: saved patterns that were compiled by earlier versions of PCRE must be
  265. recompiled for use with 7.2 (necessitated by the addition of \K, \h, \H, \v,
  266. and \V).
  267. Correction to the notes for 7.1: the note about shared libraries for Windows is
  268. wrong. Previously, three libraries were built, but each could function
  269. independently. For example, the pcreposix library also included all the
  270. functions from the basic pcre library. The change is that the three libraries
  271. are no longer independent. They are like the Unix libraries. To use the
  272. pcreposix functions, for example, you need to link with both the pcreposix and
  273. the basic pcre library.
  274. Some more features from Perl 5.10 have been added:
  275. (?-n) and (?+n) relative references for recursion and subroutines.
  276. (?(-n) and (?(+n) relative references as conditions.
  277. \k{name} and \g{name} are synonyms for \k<name>.
  278. \K to reset the start of the matched string; for example, (foo)\Kbar
  279. matches bar preceded by foo, but only sets bar as the matched string.
  280. (?| introduces a group where the capturing parentheses in each alternative
  281. start from the same number; for example, (?|(abc)|(xyz)) sets capturing
  282. parentheses number 1 in both cases.
  283. \h, \H, \v, \V match horizontal and vertical whitespace, respectively.
  284. Release 7.1 24-Apr-07
  285. ---------------------
  286. There is only one new feature in this release: a linebreak setting of
  287. PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF. It is a cut-down version of PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY, which
  288. recognizes only CRLF, CR, and LF as linebreaks.
  289. A few bugs are fixed (see ChangeLog for details), but the major change is a
  290. complete re-implementation of the build system. This now has full Autotools
  291. support and so is now "standard" in some sense. It should help with compiling
  292. PCRE in a wide variety of environments.
  293. NOTE: when building shared libraries for Windows, three dlls are now built,
  294. called libpcre, libpcreposix, and libpcrecpp. Previously, everything was
  295. included in a single dll.
  296. Another important change is that the dftables auxiliary program is no longer
  297. compiled and run at "make" time by default. Instead, a default set of character
  298. tables (assuming ASCII coding) is used. If you want to use dftables to generate
  299. the character tables as previously, add --enable-rebuild-chartables to the
  300. "configure" command. You must do this if you are compiling PCRE to run on a
  301. system that uses EBCDIC code.
  302. There is a discussion about character tables in the README file. The default is
  303. not to use dftables so that that there is no problem when cross-compiling.
  304. Release 7.0 19-Dec-06
  305. ---------------------
  306. This release has a new major number because there have been some internal
  307. upheavals to facilitate the addition of new optimizations and other facilities,
  308. and to make subsequent maintenance and extension easier. Compilation is likely
  309. to be a bit slower, but there should be no major effect on runtime performance.
  310. Previously compiled patterns are NOT upwards compatible with this release. If
  311. you have saved compiled patterns from a previous release, you will have to
  312. re-compile them. Important changes that are visible to users are:
  313. 1. The Unicode property tables have been updated to Unicode 5.0.0, which adds
  314. some more scripts.
  315. 2. The option PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY causes PCRE to recognize any Unicode newline
  316. sequence as a newline.
  317. 3. The \R escape matches a single Unicode newline sequence as a single unit.
  318. 4. New features that will appear in Perl 5.10 are now in PCRE. These include
  319. alternative Perl syntax for named parentheses, and Perl syntax for
  320. recursion.
  321. 5. The C++ wrapper interface has been extended by the addition of a
  322. QuoteMeta function and the ability to allow copy construction and
  323. assignment.
  324. For a complete list of changes, see the ChangeLog file.
  325. Release 6.7 04-Jul-06
  326. ---------------------
  327. The main additions to this release are the ability to use the same name for
  328. multiple sets of parentheses, and support for CRLF line endings in both the
  329. library and pcregrep (and in pcretest for testing).
  330. Thanks to Ian Taylor, the stack usage for many kinds of pattern has been
  331. significantly reduced for certain subject strings.
  332. Release 6.5 01-Feb-06
  333. ---------------------
  334. Important changes in this release:
  335. 1. A number of new features have been added to pcregrep.
  336. 2. The Unicode property tables have been updated to Unicode 4.1.0, and the
  337. supported properties have been extended with script names such as "Arabic",
  338. and the derived properties "Any" and "L&". This has necessitated a change to
  339. the interal format of compiled patterns. Any saved compiled patterns that
  340. use \p or \P must be recompiled.
  341. 3. The specification of recursion in patterns has been changed so that all
  342. recursive subpatterns are automatically treated as atomic groups. Thus, for
  343. example, (?R) is treated as if it were (?>(?R)). This is necessary because
  344. otherwise there are situations where recursion does not work.
  345. See the ChangeLog for a complete list of changes, which include a number of bug
  346. fixes and tidies.
  347. Release 6.0 07-Jun-05
  348. ---------------------
  349. The release number has been increased to 6.0 because of the addition of several
  350. major new pieces of functionality.
  351. A new function, pcre_dfa_exec(), which implements pattern matching using a DFA
  352. algorithm, has been added. This has a number of advantages for certain cases,
  353. though it does run more slowly, and lacks the ability to capture substrings. On
  354. the other hand, it does find all matches, not just the first, and it works
  355. better for partial matching. The pcrematching man page discusses the
  356. differences.
  357. The pcretest program has been enhanced so that it can make use of the new
  358. pcre_dfa_exec() matching function and the extra features it provides.
  359. The distribution now includes a C++ wrapper library. This is built
  360. automatically if a C++ compiler is found. The pcrecpp man page discusses this
  361. interface.
  362. The code itself has been re-organized into many more files, one for each
  363. function, so it no longer requires everything to be linked in when static
  364. linkage is used. As a consequence, some internal functions have had to have
  365. their names exposed. These functions all have names starting with _pcre_. They
  366. are undocumented, and are not intended for use by outside callers.
  367. The pcregrep program has been enhanced with new functionality such as
  368. multiline-matching and options for output more matching context. See the
  369. ChangeLog for a complete list of changes to the library and the utility
  370. programs.
  371. Release 5.0 13-Sep-04
  372. ---------------------
  373. The licence under which PCRE is released has been changed to the more
  374. conventional "BSD" licence.
  375. In the code, some bugs have been fixed, and there are also some major changes
  376. in this release (which is why I've increased the number to 5.0). Some changes
  377. are internal rearrangements, and some provide a number of new facilities. The
  378. new features are:
  379. 1. There's an "automatic callout" feature that inserts callouts before every
  380. item in the regex, and there's a new callout field that gives the position
  381. in the pattern - useful for debugging and tracing.
  382. 2. The extra_data structure can now be used to pass in a set of character
  383. tables at exec time. This is useful if compiled regex are saved and re-used
  384. at a later time when the tables may not be at the same address. If the
  385. default internal tables are used, the pointer saved with the compiled
  386. pattern is now set to NULL, which means that you don't need to do anything
  387. special unless you are using custom tables.
  388. 3. It is possible, with some restrictions on the content of the regex, to
  389. request "partial" matching. A special return code is given if all of the
  390. subject string matched part of the regex. This could be useful for testing
  391. an input field as it is being typed.
  392. 4. There is now some optional support for Unicode character properties, which
  393. means that the patterns items such as \p{Lu} and \X can now be used. Only
  394. the general category properties are supported. If PCRE is compiled with this
  395. support, an additional 90K data structure is include, which increases the
  396. size of the library dramatically.
  397. 5. There is support for saving compiled patterns and re-using them later.
  398. 6. There is support for running regular expressions that were compiled on a
  399. different host with the opposite endianness.
  400. 7. The pcretest program has been extended to accommodate the new features.
  401. The main internal rearrangement is that sequences of literal characters are no
  402. longer handled as strings. Instead, each character is handled on its own. This
  403. makes some UTF-8 handling easier, and makes the support of partial matching
  404. possible. Compiled patterns containing long literal strings will be larger as a
  405. result of this change; I hope that performance will not be much affected.
  406. Release 4.5 01-Dec-03
  407. ---------------------
  408. Again mainly a bug-fix and tidying release, with only a couple of new features:
  409. 1. It's possible now to compile PCRE so that it does not use recursive
  410. function calls when matching. Instead it gets memory from the heap. This slows
  411. things down, but may be necessary on systems with limited stacks.
  412. 2. UTF-8 string checking has been tightened to reject overlong sequences and to
  413. check that a starting offset points to the start of a character. Failure of the
  414. latter returns a new error code: PCRE_ERROR_BADUTF8_OFFSET.
  415. 3. PCRE can now be compiled for systems that use EBCDIC code.
  416. Release 4.4 21-Aug-03
  417. ---------------------
  418. This is mainly a bug-fix and tidying release. The only new feature is that PCRE
  419. checks UTF-8 strings for validity by default. There is an option to suppress
  420. this, just in case anybody wants that teeny extra bit of performance.
  421. Releases 4.1 - 4.3
  422. ------------------
  423. Sorry, I forgot about updating the NEWS file for these releases. Please take a
  424. look at ChangeLog.
  425. Release 4.0 17-Feb-03
  426. ---------------------
  427. There have been a lot of changes for the 4.0 release, adding additional
  428. functionality and mending bugs. Below is a list of the highlights of the new
  429. functionality. For full details of these features, please consult the
  430. documentation. For a complete list of changes, see the ChangeLog file.
  431. 1. Support for Perl's \Q...\E escapes.
  432. 2. "Possessive quantifiers" ?+, *+, ++, and {,}+ which come from Sun's Java
  433. package. They provide some syntactic sugar for simple cases of "atomic
  434. grouping".
  435. 3. Support for the \G assertion. It is true when the current matching position
  436. is at the start point of the match.
  437. 4. A new feature that provides some of the functionality that Perl provides
  438. with (?{...}). The facility is termed a "callout". The way it is done in PCRE
  439. is for the caller to provide an optional function, by setting pcre_callout to
  440. its entry point. To get the function called, the regex must include (?C) at
  441. appropriate points.
  442. 5. Support for recursive calls to individual subpatterns. This makes it really
  443. easy to get totally confused.
  444. 6. Support for named subpatterns. The Python syntax (?P<name>...) is used to
  445. name a group.
  446. 7. Several extensions to UTF-8 support; it is now fairly complete. There is an
  447. option for pcregrep to make it operate in UTF-8 mode.
  448. 8. The single man page has been split into a number of separate man pages.
  449. These also give rise to individual HTML pages which are put in a separate
  450. directory. There is an index.html page that lists them all. Some hyperlinking
  451. between the pages has been installed.
  452. Release 3.5 15-Aug-01
  453. ---------------------
  454. 1. The configuring system has been upgraded to use later versions of autoconf
  455. and libtool. By default it builds both a shared and a static library if the OS
  456. supports it. You can use --disable-shared or --disable-static on the configure
  457. command if you want only one of them.
  458. 2. The pcretest utility is now installed along with pcregrep because it is
  459. useful for users (to test regexs) and by doing this, it automatically gets
  460. relinked by libtool. The documentation has been turned into a man page, so
  461. there are now .1, .txt, and .html versions in /doc.
  462. 3. Upgrades to pcregrep:
  463. (i) Added long-form option names like gnu grep.
  464. (ii) Added --help to list all options with an explanatory phrase.
  465. (iii) Added -r, --recursive to recurse into sub-directories.
  466. (iv) Added -f, --file to read patterns from a file.
  467. 4. Added --enable-newline-is-cr and --enable-newline-is-lf to the configure
  468. script, to force use of CR or LF instead of \n in the source. On non-Unix
  469. systems, the value can be set in config.h.
  470. 5. The limit of 200 on non-capturing parentheses is a _nesting_ limit, not an
  471. absolute limit. Changed the text of the error message to make this clear, and
  472. likewise updated the man page.
  473. 6. The limit of 99 on the number of capturing subpatterns has been removed.
  474. The new limit is 65535, which I hope will not be a "real" limit.
  475. Release 3.3 01-Aug-00
  476. ---------------------
  477. There is some support for UTF-8 character strings. This is incomplete and
  478. experimental. The documentation describes what is and what is not implemented.
  479. Otherwise, this is just a bug-fixing release.
  480. Release 3.0 01-Feb-00
  481. ---------------------
  482. 1. A "configure" script is now used to configure PCRE for Unix systems. It
  483. builds a Makefile, a config.h file, and the pcre-config script.
  484. 2. PCRE is built as a shared library by default.
  485. 3. There is support for POSIX classes such as [:alpha:].
  486. 5. There is an experimental recursion feature.
  487. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  488. IMPORTANT FOR THOSE UPGRADING FROM VERSIONS BEFORE 2.00
  489. Please note that there has been a change in the API such that a larger
  490. ovector is required at matching time, to provide some additional workspace.
  491. The new man page has details. This change was necessary in order to support
  492. some of the new functionality in Perl 5.005.
  493. IMPORTANT FOR THOSE UPGRADING FROM VERSION 2.00
  494. Another (I hope this is the last!) change has been made to the API for the
  495. pcre_compile() function. An additional argument has been added to make it
  496. possible to pass over a pointer to character tables built in the current
  497. locale by pcre_maketables(). To use the default tables, this new argument
  498. should be passed as NULL.
  499. IMPORTANT FOR THOSE UPGRADING FROM VERSION 2.05
  500. Yet another (and again I hope this really is the last) change has been made
  501. to the API for the pcre_exec() function. An additional argument has been
  502. added to make it possible to start the match other than at the start of the
  503. subject string. This is important if there are lookbehinds. The new man
  504. page has the details, but you just want to convert existing programs, all
  505. you need to do is to stick in a new fifth argument to pcre_exec(), with a
  506. value of zero. For example, change
  507. pcre_exec(pattern, extra, subject, length, options, ovec, ovecsize)
  508. to
  509. pcre_exec(pattern, extra, subject, length, 0, options, ovec, ovecsize)
  510. ****