aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/src/backend/regex/regcomp.c
Commit message (Collapse)AuthorAge
* Avoid assertion due to disconnected NFA sub-graphs in regex parsing.Tom Lane2024-11-15
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | In commit 08c0d6ad6 which introduced "rainbow" arcs in regex NFAs, I didn't think terribly hard about what to do when creating the color complement of a rainbow arc. Clearly, the complement cannot match any characters, and I took the easy way out by just not building any arcs at all in the complement arc set. That mostly works, but Nikolay Shaplov found a case where it doesn't: if we decide to delete that sub-NFA later because it's inside a "{0}" quantifier, delsub() suffered an assertion failure. That's because delsub() relies on the target sub-NFA being fully connected. That was always true before, and the best fix seems to be to restore that property. Hence, invent a new arc type CANTMATCH that can be generated in place of an empty color complement, and drop it again later when we start NFA optimization. (At that point we don't need to do delsub() any more, and besides there are other cases where NFA optimization can lead to disconnected subgraphs.) It appears that this bug has no consequences in a non-assert-enabled build: there will be some transiently leaked NFA states/arcs, but they'll get cleaned up eventually. Still, we don't like assertion failures, so back-patch to v14 where rainbow arcs were introduced. Per bug #18708 from Nikolay Shaplov. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/18708-f94f2599c9d2c005@postgresql.org
* Redesign interrupt/cancel API for regex engine.Thomas Munro2023-04-08
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Previously, a PostgreSQL-specific callback checked by the regex engine had a way to trigger a special error code REG_CANCEL if it detected that the next call to CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() would certainly throw via ereport(). A later proposed bugfix aims to move some complex logic out of signal handlers, so that it won't run until the next CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS(), which makes the above design impossible unless we split CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() into two phases, one to run logic and another to ereport(). We may develop such a system in the future, but for the regex code it is no longer necessary. An earlier commit moved regex memory management over to our MemoryContext system. Given that the purpose of the two-phase interrupt checking was to free memory before throwing, something we don't need to worry about anymore, it seems simpler to inject CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() directly into cancelation points, and just let it throw. Since the plan is to keep PostgreSQL-specific concerns separate from the main regex engine code (with a view to bein able to stay in sync with other projects), do this with a new macro INTERRUPT(), customizable in regcustom.h and defaulting to nothing. Reviewed-by: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CA%2BhUKGK3PGKwcKqzoosamn36YW-fsuTdOPPF1i_rtEO%3DnEYKSg%40mail.gmail.com
* Consistently use named parameters in regex code consistently.Peter Geoghegan2022-09-19
| | | | | | | | | | Adjust a handful of remaining function prototypes that were overlooked by recent commit bc2187ed. This oversight wasn't caught by clang-tidy because the functions in question are only built in custom REG_DEBUG builds. Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> Reported-By: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
* Consistently use named parameters in regex code.Peter Geoghegan2022-09-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | Make regex code consistently use named parameters in function declarations. Also make sure that parameter names from each function's declaration match corresponding definition parameter names. This makes Henry Spencer's regex code follow Postgres coding standards. Author: Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> Reviewed-By: David Rowley <dgrowleyml@gmail.com> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAH2-WznJt9CMM9KJTMjJh_zbL5hD9oX44qdJ4aqZtjFi-zA3Tg@mail.gmail.com
* Handle interaction of regexp's makesearch and MATCHALL more honestly.Tom Lane2021-08-27
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Second thoughts about commit 824bf7190: we apply makesearch() to an NFA after having determined whether it is a MATCHALL pattern. Prepending ".*" doesn't make it non-MATCHALL, but it does change the maximum possible match length, and makesearch() failed to update that. This has no ill effects given the stylized usage of search NFAs, but it seems like it's better to keep the data structure consistent. In particular, fixing this allows more honest handling of the MATCHALL check in matchuntil(): we can now assert that maxmatchall is infinity, instead of lamely assuming that it should act that way. In passing, improve the code in dump[c]nfa so that infinite maxmatchall is printed as "inf" not a magic number.
* Fix regexp misbehavior with capturing parens inside "{0}".Tom Lane2021-08-24
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Regexps like "(.){0}...\1" drew an "invalid backreference number". That's not unreasonable on its face, since the capture group will never be matched if it's iterated zero times. However, other engines such as Perl's don't complain about this, nor do we throw an error for related cases such as "(.)|\1", even though that backref can never succeed either. Also, if the zero-iterations case happens at runtime rather than compile time --- say, "(x)*...\1" when there's no "x" to be found --- that's not an error, we just deem the backref to not match. Making this even less defensible, no error was thrown for nested cases such as "((.)){0}...\2"; and to add insult to injury, those cases could result in assertion failures instead. (It seems that nothing especially bad happened in non-assert builds, though.) Let's just fix it so that no error is thrown and instead the backref is deemed to never match, so that compile-time detection of no iterations behaves the same as run-time detection. Per report from Mark Dilger. This appears to be an aboriginal error in Spencer's library, so back-patch to all supported versions. Pre-v14, it turns out to also be necessary to back-patch one aspect of commits cb76fbd7e/00116dee5, namely to create capture-node subREs with the begin/end states of their subexpressions, not the current lp/rp of the outer parseqatom invocation. Otherwise delsub complains that we're trying to disconnect a state from itself. This is a bit scary but code examination shows that it's safe: in the pre-v14 code, if we want to wrap iteration around the subexpression, the first thing we do is overwrite the atom's begin/end fields with new states. So the bogus values didn't survive long enough to be used for anything, except if no iteration is required, in which case it doesn't matter. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/A099E4A8-4377-4C64-A98C-3DEDDC075502@enterprisedb.com
* Avoid determining regexp subexpression matches, when possible.Tom Lane2021-08-09
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Identifying the precise match locations for parenthesized subexpressions is a fairly expensive task given the way our regexp engine works, both at regexp compile time (where we must create an optimized NFA for each parenthesized subexpression) and at runtime (where determining exact match locations requires laborious search). Up to now we've made little attempt to optimize this situation. This patch identifies cases where we know at compile time that we won't need to know subexpression match locations, and teaches the regexp compiler to not bother creating per-subexpression regexps for parenthesis pairs that are not referenced by backrefs elsewhere in the regexp. (To preserve semantics, we obviously still have to pin down the match locations of backref references.) Users could have obtained the same results before this by being careful to write "non capturing" parentheses wherever possible, but few people bother with that. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2219936.1628115334@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Rethink regexp engine's backref-related compilation state.Tom Lane2021-08-08
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | I had committer's remorse almost immediately after pushing cb76fbd7e, upon finding that removing capturing subexpressions' subREs from the data structure broke my proposed patch for REG_NOSUB optimization. Revert that data structure change. Instead, address the concern about not changing capturing subREs' endpoints by not changing the endpoints. We don't need to, because the point of that bit was just to ensure that the atom has endpoints distinct from the outer state pair that we're stringing the branch between. We already made suitable states in the parenthesized-subexpression case, so the additional ones were just useless overhead. This seems more understandable than Spencer's original coding, and it ought to be a shade faster too by saving a few state creations and arc changes. (I actually see a couple percent improvement on Jacobson's web corpus, though that's barely above the noise floor so I wouldn't put much stock in that result.) Also, fix the logic added by ea1268f63 to ensure that the subRE recorded in v->subs[subno] is exactly the one with capno == subno. Spencer's original coding recorded the child subRE of the capture node, which is okay so far as having the right endpoint states is concerned, but as of cb76fbd7e the capturing subRE itself always has those endpoints too. I think the inconsistency is confusing for the REG_NOSUB optimization. As before, backpatch to v14. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0203588E-E609-43AF-9F4F-902854231EE7@enterprisedb.com
* Make regexp engine's backref-related compilation state more bulletproof.Tom Lane2021-08-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Up to now, we remembered the definition of a capturing parenthesis subexpression by storing a pointer to the associated subRE node. That was okay before, because that subRE didn't get modified anymore while parsing the rest of the regexp. However, in the wake of commit ea1268f63, that's no longer true: the outer invocation of parseqatom() feels free to scribble on that subRE. This seems to work anyway, because the states we jam into the child atom in the "prepare a general-purpose state skeleton" stanza aren't really semantically different from the original endpoints of the child atom. But that would be mighty easy to break, and it's definitely not how things worked before. Between this and the issue fixed in the prior commit, it seems best to get rid of this dependence on subRE nodes entirely. We don't need the whole child subRE for future backrefs, only its starting and ending NFA states; so let's just store pointers to those. Also, in the corner case where we make an extra subRE to handle immediately-nested capturing parentheses, it seems like it'd be smart to have the extra subRE have the same begin/end states as the original child subRE does (s/s2 not lp/rp). I think that linking it from lp to rp might actually be semantically wrong, though since Spencer's original code did it that way, I'm not totally certain. Using s/s2 is certainly not wrong, in any case. Per report from Mark Dilger. Back-patch to v14 where the problematic patches came in. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0203588E-E609-43AF-9F4F-902854231EE7@enterprisedb.com
* Fix use-after-free issue in regexp engine.Tom Lane2021-08-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Commit cebc1d34e taught parseqatom() to optimize cases where a branch contains only one, "messy", atom by getting rid of excess subRE nodes. The way we really should do that is to keep the subRE built for the "messy" child atom; but to avoid changing parseqatom's nominal API, I made it delete that node after copying its fields to the outer subRE made by parsebranch(). It seems that that actually worked at the time; but it became dangerous after ea1268f63, because that later commit allowed the lower invocation of parse() to return a subRE that was also pointed to by some v->subs[] entry. This meant we could wind up with a dangling pointer in v->subs[], allowing a later backref to misbehave, but only if that subRE struct had been reused in between. So the damage seems confined to cases like '((...))...(...\2'. To fix, do what I should have done before and modify parseqatom's API to make it possible for it to remove the caller's subRE instead of the callee's. That's safer because we know that subRE isn't complete yet, so noplace else will have a pointer to it. Per report from Mark Dilger. Back-patch to v14 where the problematic patches came in. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/0203588E-E609-43AF-9F4F-902854231EE7@enterprisedb.com
* Fix performance issue in new regex match-all detection code.Tom Lane2021-05-03
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Commit 824bf7190 introduced a new search of the NFAs generated by regex compilation. I failed to think hard about the performance characteristics of that search, with the predictable outcome that it's bad: weird regexes can trigger exponential search time. Worse, there's no check-for-interrupt in that code, so you can't even cancel the query if this happens. Fix by introducing memo-ization of the search results, so that any one NFA state need be examined in detail just once. This potentially uses a lot of memory, but we can bound the memory usage by putting a limit on the number of states for which we'll try to prove match-all-ness. That is sane because we already have a limit (DUPINF) on the maximum finite string length that a matchall regex can match; and patterns that involve much more than DUPINF states would probably exceed that limit anyway. Also, rearrange the logic so that we check the basic is-the-graph- all-RAINBOW-arcs property before we start the recursive search to determine path lengths. This will ensure that we fall out quickly whenever the NFA couldn't possibly be matchall. Also stick in a check-for-interrupt, just in case these measures don't completely eliminate the risk of slowness. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3483895.1619898362@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Suppress unnecessary regex subre nodes in a couple more cases.Tom Lane2021-03-02
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This extends the changes made in commit cebc1d34e, teaching parseqatom() to generate fewer or cheaper subre nodes in some edge cases. The case of interest here is a quantified atom that is "messy" only because it has greediness opposite to what preceded it (whereas captures and backrefs are intrinsically messy). In this case we don't need an iteration node, since we don't care where the sub-matches of the quantifier are; and we might also not need a second concatenation node. This seems of only marginal real-world use according to my testing, but I wanted to get it in before wrapping up this series of regex performance fixes. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1340281.1613018383@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Fix semantics of regular expression back-references.Tom Lane2021-03-02
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | POSIX defines the behavior of back-references thus: The back-reference expression '\n' shall match the same (possibly empty) string of characters as was matched by a subexpression enclosed between "\(" and "\)" preceding the '\n'. As far as I can see, the back-reference is supposed to consider only the data characters matched by the referenced subexpression. However, because our engine copies the NFA constructed from the referenced subexpression, it effectively enforces any constraints therein, too. As an example, '(^.)\1' ought to match 'xx', or any other string starting with two occurrences of the same character; but in our code it does not, and indeed can't match anything, because the '^' anchor constraint is included in the backref's copied NFA. If POSIX intended that, you'd think they'd mention it. Perl for one doesn't act that way, so it's hard to conclude that this isn't a bug. Fix by modifying the backref's NFA immediately after it's copied from the reference, replacing all constraint arcs by EMPTY arcs so that the constraints are treated as automatically satisfied. This still allows us to enforce matching rules that depend only on the data characters; for example, in '(^\d+).*\1' the NFA matching step will still know that the backref can only match strings of digits. Perhaps surprisingly, this change does not affect the results of any of a rather large corpus of real-world regexes. Nonetheless, I would not consider back-patching it, since it's a clear compatibility break. Patch by me, reviewed by Joel Jacobson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/661609.1614560029@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Improve memory management in regex compiler.Tom Lane2021-02-26
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The previous logic here created a separate pool of arcs for each state, so that the out-arcs of each state were physically stored within it. Perhaps this choice was driven by trying to not include a "from" pointer within each arc; but Spencer gave up on that idea long ago, and it's hard to see what the value is now. The approach turns out to be fairly disastrous in terms of memory consumption, though. In the first place, NFAs built by this engine seem to have about 4 arcs per state on average, with a majority having only one or two out-arcs. So pre-allocating 10 out-arcs for each state is already cause for a factor of two or more bloat. Worse, the NFA optimization phase moves arcs around with abandon. In a large NFA, some of the states will have hundreds of out-arcs, so towards the end of the optimization phase we have a significant number of states whose arc pools have room for hundreds of arcs each, even though only a few of those arcs are in use. We have seen real-world regexes in which this effect bloats the memory requirement by 25X or even more. Hence, get rid of the per-state arc pools in favor of a single arc pool for the whole NFA, with variable-sized allocation batches instead of always asking for 10 at a time. While we're at it, let's batch the allocations of state structs too, to further reduce the malloc traffic. This incidentally allows moveouts() to be optimized in a similar way to moveins(): when moving an arc to another state, it's now valid to just re-link the same arc struct into a different outchain, where before the code invariants required us to make a physically new arc and then free the old one. These changes reduce the regex compiler's typical space consumption for average-size regexes by about a factor of two, and much more for large or complicated regexes. In a large test set of real-world regexes, we formerly had half a dozen cases that failed with "regular expression too complex" due to exceeding the REG_MAX_COMPILE_SPACE limit (about 150MB); we would have had to raise that limit to something close to 400MB to make them work with the old code. Now, none of those cases need more than 13MB to compile. Furthermore, the test set is about 10% faster overall due to less malloc traffic. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/168861.1614298592@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Change regex \D and \W shorthands to always match newlines.Tom Lane2021-02-25
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Newline is certainly not a digit, nor a word character, so it is sensible that it should match these complemented character classes. Previously, \D and \W acted that way by default, but in newline-sensitive mode ('n' or 'p' flag) they did not match newlines. This behavior was previously forced because explicit complemented character classes don't match newlines in newline-sensitive mode; but as of the previous commit that implementation constraint no longer exists. It seems useful to change this because the primary real-world use for newline-sensitive mode seems to be to match the default behavior of other regex engines such as Perl and Javascript ... and their default behavior is that these match newlines. The old behavior can be kept by writing an explicit complemented character class, i.e. [^[:digit:]] or [^[:word:]]. (This means that \D and \W are not exactly equivalent to those strings, but they weren't anyway.) Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3220564.1613859619@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Allow complemented character class escapes within regex brackets.Tom Lane2021-02-25
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The complement-class escapes \D, \S, \W are now allowed within bracket expressions. There is no semantic difficulty with doing that, but the rather hokey macro-expansion-based implementation previously used here couldn't cope. Also, invent "word" as an allowed character class name, thus "\w" is now equivalent to "[[:word:]]" outside brackets, or "[:word:]" within brackets. POSIX allows such implementation-specific extensions, and the same name is used in e.g. bash. One surprising compatibility issue this raises is that constructs such as "[\w-_]" are now disallowed, as our documentation has always said they should be: character classes can't be endpoints of a range. Previously, because \w was just a macro for "[:alnum:]_", such a construct was read as "[[:alnum:]_-_]", so it was accepted so long as the character after "-" was numerically greater than or equal to "_". Some implementation cleanup along the way: * Remove the lexnest() hack, and in consequence clean up wordchrs() to not interact with the lexer. * Fix colorcomplement() to not be O(N^2) in the number of colors involved. * Get rid of useless-as-far-as-I-can-see calls of element() on single-character character element names in brackpart(). element() always maps these to the character itself, and things would be quite broken if it didn't --- should "[a]" match something different than "a" does? Besides, the shortcut path in brackpart() wasn't doing this anyway, making it even more inconsistent. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/2845172.1613674385@sss.pgh.pa.us Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/3220564.1613859619@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Avoid generating extra subre tree nodes for capturing parentheses.Tom Lane2021-02-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Previously, each pair of capturing parentheses gave rise to a separate subre tree node, whose only function was to identify that we ought to capture the match details for this particular sub-expression. In most cases we don't really need that, since we can perfectly well put a "capture this" annotation on the child node that does the real matching work. As with the two preceding commits, the main value of this is to avoid generating and optimizing an NFA for a tree node that's not really pulling its weight. The chosen data representation only allows one capture annotation per subre node. In the legal-per-spec, but seemingly not very useful, case where there are multiple capturing parens around the exact same bit of the regex (i.e. "((xyz))"), wrap the child node in N-1 capture nodes that act the same as before. We could work harder at that but I'll refrain, pending some evidence that such cases are worth troubling over. In passing, improve the comments in regex.h to say what all the different re_info bits mean. Some of them were pretty obvious but others not so much, so reverse-engineer some documentation. This is part of a patch series that in total reduces the regex engine's runtime by about a factor of four on a large corpus of real-world regexes. Patch by me, reviewed by Joel Jacobson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1340281.1613018383@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Convert regex engine's subre tree from binary to N-ary style.Tom Lane2021-02-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Instead of having left and right child links in subre structs, have a single child link plus a sibling link. Multiple children of a tree node are now reached by chasing the sibling chain. The beneficiary of this is alternation tree nodes. A regular expression with N (>1) branches is now represented by one alternation node with N children, rather than a tree that includes N alternation nodes as well as N children. While the old representation didn't really cost anything extra at execution time, it was pretty horrid for compilation purposes, because each of the alternation nodes had its own NFA, which we were too stupid not to separately optimize. (To make matters worse, all of those NFAs described the entire alternation pattern, not just the portion of it that one might expect from the tree structure.) We continue to require concatenation nodes to have exactly two children. This data structure is now prepared to support more, but the executor's logic would need some careful redesign, and it's not clear that a lot of benefit could be had. This is part of a patch series that in total reduces the regex engine's runtime by about a factor of four on a large corpus of real-world regexes. Patch by me, reviewed by Joel Jacobson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1340281.1613018383@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Fix regex engine to suppress useless concatenation sub-REs.Tom Lane2021-02-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The comment for parsebranch() claims that it avoids generating unnecessary concatenation nodes in the "subre" tree, but it missed some significant cases. Once we've decided that a given atom is "messy" and can't be bundled with the preceding atom(s) of the current regex branch, parseqatom() always generated two new concat nodes, one to concat the messy atom to what follows it in the branch, and an upper node to concatenate the preceding part of the branch to that one. But one or both of these could be unnecessary, if the messy atom is the first, last, or only one in the branch. Improve the code to suppress such useless concat nodes, along with the no-op child nodes representing empty chunks of a branch. Reducing the number of subre tree nodes offers significant savings not only at execution but during compilation, because each subre node has its own NFA that has to be separately optimized. (Maybe someday we'll figure out how to share the optimization work across multiple tree nodes, but it doesn't look easy.) Eliminating upper tree nodes is especially useful because they tend to have larger NFAs. This is part of a patch series that in total reduces the regex engine's runtime by about a factor of four on a large corpus of real-world regexes. Patch by me, reviewed by Joel Jacobson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1340281.1613018383@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Recognize "match-all" NFAs within the regex engine.Tom Lane2021-02-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This builds on the previous "rainbow" patch to detect NFAs that will match any string, though possibly with constraints on the string length. This definition is chosen to match constructs such as ".*", ".+", and ".{1,100}". Recognizing such an NFA after the optimization pass is fairly cheap, since we basically just have to verify that all arcs are RAINBOW arcs and count the number of steps to the end state. (Well, there's a bit of complication with pseudo-color arcs for string boundary conditions, but not much.) Once we have these markings, the regex executor functions longest(), shortest(), and matchuntil() don't have to expend per-character work to determine whether a given substring satisfies such an NFA; they just need to check its length against the bounds. Since some matching problems require O(N) invocations of these functions, we've reduced the runtime for an N-character string from O(N^2) to O(N). Of course, this is no help for non-matchall sub-patterns, but those usually have constraints that allow us to avoid needing O(N) substring checks in the first place. It's precisely the unconstrained "match-all" cases that cause the most headaches. This is part of a patch series that in total reduces the regex engine's runtime by about a factor of four on a large corpus of real-world regexes. Patch by me, reviewed by Joel Jacobson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1340281.1613018383@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Invent "rainbow" arcs within the regex engine.Tom Lane2021-02-20
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Some regular expression constructs, most notably the "." match-anything metacharacter, produce a sheaf of parallel NFA arcs covering all possible colors (that is, character equivalence classes). We can make a noticeable improvement in the space and time needed to process large regexes by replacing such cases with a single arc bearing the special color code "RAINBOW". This requires only minor additional complication in places such as pull() and push(). Callers of pg_reg_getoutarcs() must now be prepared for the possibility of seeing a RAINBOW arc. For the one known user, contrib/pg_trgm, that's a net benefit since it cuts the number of arcs to be dealt with, and the handling isn't any different than for other colors that contain too many characters to be dealt with individually. This is part of a patch series that in total reduces the regex engine's runtime by about a factor of four on a large corpus of real-world regexes. Patch by me, reviewed by Joel Jacobson Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1340281.1613018383@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Make some minor improvements in the regex code.Tom Lane2021-02-17
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Push some hopefully-uncontroversial bits extracted from an upcoming patch series, to remove non-relevant clutter from the main patches. In compact(), return immediately after setting REG_ASSERT error; continuing the loop would just lead to assertion failure below. (Ask me how I know.) In parseqatom(), remove assertion that moresubs() did its job. When moresubs actually did its job, this is redundant with that function's final assert; but when it failed on OOM, this is an assertion crash. We could avoid the crash by adding a NOERR() check before the assertion, but it seems better to subtract code than add it. (Note that there's a NOERR exit a few lines further down, and nothing else between here and there requires moresubs to have succeeded. So we don't really need an extra error exit.) This is a live bug in assert-enabled builds, but given the very low likelihood of OOM in moresub's tiny allocation, I don't think it's worth back-patching. On the other hand, it seems worthwhile to add an assertion that our intended v->subs[subno] target is still null by the time we are ready to insert into it, since there's a recursion in between. In pg_regexec, ensure we fflush any debug output on the way out, and try to make MDEBUG messages more uniform and helpful. (In particular, ensure that all of them are prefixed with the subre's id number, so one can match up entry and exit reports.) Add some test cases in test_regex to improve coverage of lookahead and lookbehind constraints. Adding these now is mainly to establish that this is indeed the existing behavior. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/1340281.1613018383@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Minor fixes to improve regex debugging code.Tom Lane2021-02-14
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | When REG_DEBUG is defined, ensure that an un-filled "struct cnfa" is all-zeroes, not just that it has nstates == 0. This is mainly so that looking at "struct subre" structs in gdb doesn't distract one with a lot of garbage fields during regex compilation. Adjust some places that print debug output to have suitable fflush calls afterwards. In passing, correct an erroneous ancient comment: the concatenation subre-s created by parsebranch() have op == '.' not ','. Noted while fooling around with some regex performance improvements.
* Fix inconsistencies and typos in the tree, take 9Michael Paquier2019-08-05
| | | | | | | | This addresses more issues with code comments, variable names and unreferenced variables. Author: Alexander Lakhin Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/7ab243e0-116d-3e44-d120-76b3df7abefd@gmail.com
* Phase 2 pgindent run for v12.Tom Lane2019-05-22
| | | | | | | | | Switch to 2.1 version of pg_bsd_indent. This formats multiline function declarations "correctly", that is with additional lines of parameter declarations indented to match where the first line's left parenthesis is. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=0P3FeTXRcU5B2W3jv3PgRVZ-kGUXLGfd42FFhUROO3ug@mail.gmail.com
* Fix misoptimization of "{1,1}" quantifiers in regular expressions.Tom Lane2019-05-12
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | A bounded quantifier with m = n = 1 might be thought a no-op. But according to our documentation (which traces back to Henry Spencer's original man page) it still imposes greediness, or non-greediness in the case of the non-greedy variant "{1,1}?", on whatever it's attached to. This turns out not to work though, because parseqatom() optimizes away the m = n = 1 case without regard for whether it's supposed to change the greediness of the argument RE. We can fix this by just not applying the optimization when the greediness needs to change; the subsequent general cases handle it fine. The three cases in which we can still apply the optimization are (a) no quantifier, or quantifier does not impose a preference; (b) atom has no greediness property, implying it cannot match a variable amount of text anyway; or (c) quantifier's greediness is same as atom's. Note that in most cases where one of these applies, we'd have exited earlier in the "not a messy case" fast path. I think it's now only possible to get to the optimization when the atom involves capturing parentheses or a non-top-level backref. Back-patch to all supported branches. I'd ordinarily be hesitant to put a subtle behavioral change into back branches, but in this case it's very hard to see a reason why somebody would write "{1,1}?" unless they're trying to get the documented change-of-greediness behavior. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/5bb27a41-350d-37bf-901e-9d26f5592dd0@charter.net
* Clean up warnings from -Wimplicit-fallthrough.Tom Lane2018-05-01
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Recent gcc can warn about switch-case fall throughs that are not explicitly labeled as intentional. This seems like a good thing, so clean up the warnings exposed thereby by labeling all such cases with comments that gcc will recognize. In files that already had one or more suitable comments, I generally matched the existing style of those. Otherwise I went with /* FALLTHROUGH */, which is one of the spellings approved at the more-restrictive-than-default level -Wimplicit-fallthrough=4. (At the default level you can also spell it /* FALL ?THRU */, and it's not picky about case. What you can't do is include additional text in the same comment, so some existing comments containing versions of this aren't good enough.) Testing with gcc 8.0.1 (Fedora 28's current version), I found that I also had to put explicit "break"s after elog(ERROR) or ereport(ERROR); apparently, for this purpose gcc doesn't recognize that those don't return. That seems like possibly a gcc bug, but it's fine because in most places we did that anyway; so this amounts to a visit from the style police. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/15083.1525207729@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Phase 2 of pgindent updates.Tom Lane2017-06-21
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Change pg_bsd_indent to follow upstream rules for placement of comments to the right of code, and remove pgindent hack that caused comments following #endif to not obey the general rule. Commit e3860ffa4dd0dad0dd9eea4be9cc1412373a8c89 wasn't actually using the published version of pg_bsd_indent, but a hacked-up version that tried to minimize the amount of movement of comments to the right of code. The situation of interest is where such a comment has to be moved to the right of its default placement at column 33 because there's code there. BSD indent has always moved right in units of tab stops in such cases --- but in the previous incarnation, indent was working in 8-space tab stops, while now it knows we use 4-space tabs. So the net result is that in about half the cases, such comments are placed one tab stop left of before. This is better all around: it leaves more room on the line for comment text, and it means that in such cases the comment uniformly starts at the next 4-space tab stop after the code, rather than sometimes one and sometimes two tabs after. Also, ensure that comments following #endif are indented the same as comments following other preprocessor commands such as #else. That inconsistency turns out to have been self-inflicted damage from a poorly-thought-through post-indent "fixup" in pgindent. This patch is much less interesting than the first round of indent changes, but also bulkier, so I thought it best to separate the effects. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dAmxK-0006EE-1r@gemulon.postgresql.org Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30527.1495162840@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Initial pgindent run with pg_bsd_indent version 2.0.Tom Lane2017-06-21
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The new indent version includes numerous fixes thanks to Piotr Stefaniak. The main changes visible in this commit are: * Nicer formatting of function-pointer declarations. * No longer unexpectedly removes spaces in expressions using casts, sizeof, or offsetof. * No longer wants to add a space in "struct structname *varname", as well as some similar cases for const- or volatile-qualified pointers. * Declarations using PG_USED_FOR_ASSERTS_ONLY are formatted more nicely. * Fixes bug where comments following declarations were sometimes placed with no space separating them from the code. * Fixes some odd decisions for comments following case labels. * Fixes some cases where comments following code were indented to less than the expected column 33. On the less good side, it now tends to put more whitespace around typedef names that are not listed in typedefs.list. This might encourage us to put more effort into typedef name collection; it's not really a bug in indent itself. There are more changes coming after this round, having to do with comment indentation and alignment of lines appearing within parentheses. I wanted to limit the size of the diffs to something that could be reviewed without one's eyes completely glazing over, so it seemed better to split up the changes as much as practical. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/E1dAmxK-0006EE-1r@gemulon.postgresql.org Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30527.1495162840@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Document intentional violations of header inclusion policy.Tom Lane2017-03-08
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Although there are good reasons for our policy of including postgres.h as the first #include in every .c file, never from .h files, there are two places where it seems expedient to violate the policy because the alternative is to modify externally-supplied .c files. (In the case of the regexp library, the idea that it's externally-supplied is kind of at odds with reality, but I haven't entirely given up hope that it will become a standalone project some day.) Add some comments to make it explicit that this is a policy violation and provide the reasoning. In passing, move #include "miscadmin.h" out of regcomp.c and into regcustom.h, which is where it should be if we're taking this reasoning seriously at all. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAEepm=2zCoeq3QxVwhS5DFeUh=yU6z81pbWMgfOB8OzyiBwxzw@mail.gmail.com Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/11634.1488932128@sss.pgh.pa.us
* Make locale-dependent regex character classes work for large char codes.Tom Lane2016-09-05
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Previously, we failed to recognize Unicode characters above U+7FF as being members of locale-dependent character classes such as [[:alpha:]]. (Actually, the same problem occurs for large pg_wchar values in any multibyte encoding, but UTF8 is the only case people have actually complained about.) It's impractical to get Spencer's original code to handle character classes or ranges containing many thousands of characters, because it insists on considering each member character individually at regex compile time, whether or not the character will ever be of interest at run time. To fix, choose a cutoff point MAX_SIMPLE_CHR below which we process characters individually as before, and deal with entire ranges or classes as single entities above that. We can actually make things cheaper than before for chars below the cutoff, because the color map can now be a simple linear array for those chars, rather than the multilevel tree structure Spencer designed. It's more expensive than before for chars above the cutoff, because we must do a binary search in a list of high chars and char ranges used in the regex pattern, plus call iswalpha() and friends for each locale-dependent character class used in the pattern. However, multibyte encodings are normally designed to give smaller codes to popular characters, so that we can expect that the slow path will be taken relatively infrequently. In any case, the speed penalty appears minor except when we have to apply iswalpha() etc. to high character codes at runtime --- and the previous coding gave wrong answers for those cases, so whether it was faster is moot. Tom Lane, reviewed by Heikki Linnakangas Discussion: <15563.1471913698@sss.pgh.pa.us>
* Clean up another pre-ANSI-C-ism in regex code: get rid of pcolor typedef.Tom Lane2016-08-19
| | | | | | pcolor was used to represent function arguments that are nominally of type color, but when using a pre-ANSI C compiler would be passed as the promoted integer type. We really don't need that anymore.
* Remove typedef celt from the regex library, along with macro NOCELT.Tom Lane2016-08-19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The regex library used to have a notion of a "collating element" that was distinct from a "character", but Henry Spencer never actually implemented his planned support for multi-character collating elements, and the Tcl crew ripped out most of the stubs for that years ago. The only thing left that distinguished the "celt" typedef from the "chr" typedef was that "celt" was supposed to also be able to hold the not-a-character "NOCELT" value. However, NOCELT was not used anywhere after the MCCE stub removal changes, which means there's no need for celt to be different from chr. Removing the separate typedef simplifies matters and also removes a trap for the unwary, in that celt is signed while chr may not be, so comparisons could mean different things. There's no bug there today because we restrict CHR_MAX to be less than INT_MAX, but I think there may have been such bugs before we did that, and there could be again if anyone ever decides to fool with the range of chr. This patch also removes assorted unnecessary casts to "chr" of values that are already chrs. Many of these seem to be leftover from days when the code was compatible with pre-ANSI C.
* Fix some regex issues with out-of-range characters and large char ranges.Tom Lane2016-02-08
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Previously, our regex code defined CHR_MAX as 0xfffffffe, which is a bad choice because it is outside the range of type "celt" (int32). Characters approaching that limit could lead to infinite loops in logic such as "for (c = a; c <= b; c++)" where c is of type celt but the range bounds are chr. Such loops will work safely only if CHR_MAX+1 is representable in celt, since c must advance to beyond b before the loop will exit. Fortunately, there seems no reason not to restrict CHR_MAX to 0x7ffffffe. It's highly unlikely that Unicode will ever assign codes that high, and none of our other backend encodings need characters beyond that either. In addition to modifying the macro, we have to explicitly enforce character range restrictions on the values of \u, \U, and \x escape sequences, else the limit is trivially bypassed. Also, the code for expanding case-independent character ranges in bracket expressions had a potential integer overflow in its calculation of the number of characters it could generate, which could lead to allocating too small a character vector and then overwriting memory. An attacker with the ability to supply arbitrary regex patterns could easily cause transient DOS via server crashes, and the possibility for privilege escalation has not been ruled out. Quite aside from the integer-overflow problem, the range expansion code was unnecessarily inefficient in that it always produced a result consisting of individual characters, abandoning the knowledge that we had a range to start with. If the input range is large, this requires excessive memory. Change it so that the original range is reported as-is, and then we add on any case-equivalent characters that are outside that range. With this approach, we can bound the number of individual characters allowed without sacrificing much. This patch allows at most 100000 individual characters, which I believe to be more than the number of case pairs existing in Unicode, so that the restriction will never be hit in practice. It's still possible for range() to take awhile given a large character code range, so also add statement-cancel detection to its loop. The downstream function dovec() also lacked cancel detection, and could take a long time given a large output from range(). Per fuzz testing by Greg Stark. Back-patch to all supported branches. Security: CVE-2016-0773
* Fix enforcement of restrictions inside regexp lookaround constraints.Tom Lane2015-11-07
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Lookahead and lookbehind constraints aren't allowed to contain backrefs, and parentheses within them are always considered non-capturing. Or so says the manual. But the regexp parser forgot about these rules once inside a parenthesized subexpression, so that constructs like (\w)(?=(\1)) were accepted (but then not correctly executed --- a case like this acted like (\w)(?=\w), without any enforcement that the two \w's match the same text). And in (?=((foo))) the innermost parentheses would be counted as capturing parentheses, though no text would ever be captured for them. To fix, properly pass down the "type" argument to the recursive invocation of parse(). Back-patch to all supported branches; it was agreed that silent misexecution of such patterns is worse than throwing an error, even though new errors in minor releases are generally not desirable.
* Implement lookbehind constraints in our regular-expression engine.Tom Lane2015-10-30
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | A lookbehind constraint is like a lookahead constraint in that it consumes no text; but it checks for existence (or nonexistence) of a match *ending* at the current point in the string, rather than one *starting* at the current point. This is a long-requested feature since it exists in many other regex libraries, but Henry Spencer had never got around to implementing it in the code we use. Just making it work is actually pretty trivial; but naive copying of the logic for lookahead constraints leads to code that often spends O(N^2) time to scan an N-character string, because we have to run the match engine from string start to the current probe point each time the constraint is checked. In typical use-cases a lookbehind constraint will be written at the start of the regex and hence will need to be checked at every character --- so O(N^2) work overall. To fix that, I introduced a third copy of the core DFA matching loop, paralleling the existing longest() and shortest() loops. This version, matchuntil(), can suspend and resume matching given a couple of pointers' worth of storage space. So we need only run it across the string once, stopping at each interesting probe point and then resuming to advance to the next one. I also put in an optimization that simplifies one-character lookahead and lookbehind constraints, such as "(?=x)" or "(?<!\w)", into AHEAD and BEHIND constraints, which already existed in the engine. This avoids the overhead of the LACON machinery entirely for these rather common cases. The net result is that lookbehind constraints run a factor of three or so slower than Perl's for multi-character constraints, but faster than Perl's for one-character constraints ... and they work fine for variable-length constraints, which Perl gives up on entirely. So that's not bad from a competitive perspective, and there's room for further optimization if anyone cares. (In reality, raw scan rate across a large input string is probably not that big a deal for Postgres usage anyway; so I'm happy if it's linear.)
* Miscellaneous cleanup of regular-expression compiler.Tom Lane2015-10-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Revert our previous addition of "all" flags to copyins() and copyouts(); they're no longer needed, and were never anything but an unsightly hack. Improve a couple of infelicities in the REG_DEBUG code for dumping the NFA data structure, including adding code to count the total number of states and arcs. Add a couple of missed error checks. Add some more documentation in the README file, and some regression tests illustrating cases that exceeded the state-count limit and/or took unreasonable amounts of time before this set of patches. Back-patch to all supported branches.
* Improve memory-usage accounting in regular-expression compiler.Tom Lane2015-10-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This code previously counted the number of NFA states it created, and complained if a limit was exceeded, so as to prevent bizarre regex patterns from consuming unreasonable time or memory. That's fine as far as it went, but the code paid no attention to how many arcs linked those states. Since regexes can be contrived that have O(N) states but will need O(N^2) arcs after fixempties() processing, it was still possible to blow out memory, and take a long time doing it too. To fix, modify the bookkeeping to count space used by both states and arcs. I did not bother with including the "color map" in the accounting; it can only grow to a few megabytes, which is not a lot in comparison to what we're allowing for states+arcs (about 150MB on 64-bit machines or half that on 32-bit machines). Looking at some of the larger real-world regexes captured in the Tcl regression test suite suggests that the most that is likely to be needed for regexes found in the wild is under 10MB, so I believe that the current limit has enough headroom to make it okay to keep it as a hard-wired limit. In connection with this, redefine REG_ETOOBIG as meaning "regular expression is too complex"; the previous wording of "nfa has too many states" was already somewhat inapropos because of the error code's use for stack depth overrun, and it was not very user-friendly either. Back-patch to all supported branches.
* Improve performance of pullback/pushfwd in regular-expression compiler.Tom Lane2015-10-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The previous coding would create a new intermediate state every time it wanted to interchange the ordering of two constraint arcs. Certain regex features such as \Y can generate large numbers of parallel constraint arcs, and if we needed to reorder the results of that, we created unreasonable numbers of intermediate states. To improve matters, keep a list of already-created intermediate states associated with the state currently being considered by the outer loop; we can re-use such states to place all the new arcs leading to the same destination or source. I also took the trouble to redefine push() and pull() to have a less risky API: they no longer delete any state or arc that the caller might possibly have a pointer to, except for the specifically-passed constraint arc. This reduces the risk of re-introducing the same type of error seen in the failed patch for CVE-2007-4772. Back-patch to all supported branches.
* Improve performance of fixempties() pass in regular-expression compiler.Tom Lane2015-10-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The previous coding took something like O(N^4) time to fully process a chain of N EMPTY arcs. We can't really do much better than O(N^2) because we have to insert about that many arcs, but we can do lots better than what's there now. The win comes partly from using mergeins() to amortize de-duplication of arcs across multiple source states, and partly from exploiting knowledge of the ordering of arcs for each state to avoid looking at arcs we don't need to consider during the scan. We do have to be a bit careful of the possible reordering of arcs introduced by the sort-merge coding of the previous commit, but that's not hard to deal with. Back-patch to all supported branches.
* Fix O(N^2) performance problems in regular-expression compiler.Tom Lane2015-10-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Change the singly-linked in-arc and out-arc lists to be doubly-linked, so that arc deletion is constant time rather than having worst-case time proportional to the number of other arcs on the connected states. Modify the bulk arc transfer operations copyins(), copyouts(), moveins(), moveouts() so that they use a sort-and-merge algorithm whenever there's more than a small number of arcs to be copied or moved. The previous method is O(N^2) in the number of arcs involved, because it performs duplicate checking independently for each copied arc. The new method may change the ordering of existing arcs for the destination state, but nothing really cares about that. Provide another bulk arc copying method mergeins(), which is unused as of this commit but is needed for the next one. It basically is like copyins(), but the source arcs might not all come from the same state. Replace the O(N^2) bubble-sort algorithm used in carcsort() with a qsort() call. These changes greatly improve the performance of regex compilation for large or complex regexes, at the cost of extra space for arc storage during compilation. The original tradeoff was probably fine when it was made, but now we care more about speed and less about memory consumption. Back-patch to all supported branches.
* Fix regular-expression compiler to handle loops of constraint arcs.Tom Lane2015-10-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | It's possible to construct regular expressions that contain loops of constraint arcs (that is, ^ $ AHEAD BEHIND or LACON arcs). There's no use in fully traversing such a loop at execution, since you'd just end up in the same NFA state without having consumed any input. Worse, such a loop leads to infinite looping in the pullback/pushfwd stage of compilation, because we keep pushing or pulling the same constraints around the loop in a vain attempt to move them to the pre or post state. Such looping was previously recognized in CVE-2007-4772; but the fix only handled the case of trivial single-state loops (that is, a constraint arc leading back to its source state) ... and not only that, it was incorrect even for that case, because it broke the admittedly-not-very-clearly-stated API contract of the pull() and push() subroutines. The first two regression test cases added by this commit exhibit patterns that result in assertion failures because of that (though there seem to be no ill effects in non-assert builds). The other new test cases exhibit multi-state constraint loops; in an unpatched build they will run until the NFA state-count limit is exceeded. To fix, remove the code added for CVE-2007-4772, and instead create a general-purpose constraint-loop-breaking phase of regex compilation that executes before we do pullback/pushfwd. Since we never need to traverse a constraint loop fully, we can just break the loop at any chosen spot, if we add clone states that can replicate any sequence of arc transitions that would've traversed just part of the loop. Also add some commentary clarifying why we have to have all these machinations in the first place. This class of problems has been known for some time --- we had a report from Marc Mamin about two years ago, for example, and there are related complaints in the Tcl bug tracker. I had discussed a fix of this kind off-list with Henry Spencer, but didn't get around to doing something about it until the issue was rediscovered by Greg Stark recently. Back-patch to all supported branches.
* Add recursion depth protections to regular expression matching.Tom Lane2015-10-02
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Some of the functions in regex compilation and execution recurse, and therefore could in principle be driven to stack overflow. The Tcl crew has seen this happen in practice in duptraverse(), though their fix was to put in a hard-wired limit on the number of recursive levels, which is not too appetizing --- fortunately, we have enough infrastructure to check the actually available stack. Greg Stark has also seen it in other places while fuzz testing on a machine with limited stack space. Let's put guards in to prevent crashes in all these places. Since the regex code would leak memory if we simply threw elog(ERROR), we have to introduce an API that checks for stack depth without throwing such an error. Fortunately that's not difficult.
* Fix low-probability memory leak in regex execution.Tom Lane2015-09-18
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | After an internal failure in shortest() or longest() while pinning down the exact location of a match, find() forgot to free the DFA structure before returning. This is pretty unlikely to occur, since we just successfully ran the "search" variant of the DFA; but it could happen, and it would result in a session-lifespan memory leak since this code uses malloc() directly. Problem seems to have been aboriginal in Spencer's library, so back-patch all the way. In passing, correct a thinko in a comment I added awhile back about the meaning of the "ntree" field. I happened across these issues while comparing our code to Tcl's version of the library.
* Sync regex code with Tcl 8.6.4.Tom Lane2015-09-16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Sync our regex code with upstream changes since last time we did this, which was Tcl 8.5.11 (see commit 08fd6ff37f71485e2fc04bc6ce07d2a483c36702). The only functional change here is to disbelieve that an octal escape is three digits long if it would exceed \377. That's a bug fix, but it's a minor one and could change the interpretation of working regexes, so don't back-patch. In addition to that, s/INFINITY/DUPINF/ to eliminate the risk of collisions with <math.h>'s macro, and s/LOCAL/NOPROP/ because that also seems like an unnecessarily collision-prone macro name. There were some other cosmetic changes in their copy that I did not adopt, notably a rather half-hearted attempt at renaming some of the C functions in a more verbose style. (I'm not necessarily against the concept, but renaming just a few functions in the package is not an improvement.)
* Fix minor bug in regexp makesearch() function.Tom Lane2015-09-09
| | | | | | | | The list-wrangling here was done wrong, allowing the same state to get put into the list twice. The following loop then would clone it twice. The second clone would wind up with no inarcs, so that there was no observable misbehavior AFAICT, but a useless state in the finished NFA isn't an especially good thing.
* Fix some possible low-memory failures in regexp compilation.Tom Lane2015-08-12
| | | | | | | | | newnfa() failed to set the regex error state when malloc() fails. Several places in regcomp.c failed to check for an error after calling subre(). Each of these mistakes could lead to null-pointer-dereference crashes in memory-starved backends. Report and patch by Andreas Seltenreich. Back-patch to all branches.
* Fix two low-probability memory leaks in regular expression parsing.Tom Lane2014-07-18
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | If pg_regcomp failed after having invoked markst/cleanst, it would leak any "struct subre" nodes it had created. (We've already detected all regex syntax errors at that point, so the only likely causes of later failure would be query cancel or out-of-memory.) To fix, make sure freesrnode knows the difference between the pre-cleanst and post-cleanst cleanup procedures. Add some documentation of this less-than-obvious point. Also, newlacon did the wrong thing with an out-of-memory failure from realloc(), so that the previously allocated array would be leaked. Both of these are pretty low-probability scenarios, but a bug is a bug, so patch all the way back. Per bug #10976 from Arthur O'Dwyer.
* pgindent run for 9.4Bruce Momjian2014-05-06
| | | | | This includes removing tabs after periods in C comments, which was applied to back branches, so this change should not effect backpatching.
* Allow regex operations to be terminated early by query cancel requests.Tom Lane2014-03-01
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The regex code didn't have any provision for query cancel; which is unsurprising given its non-Postgres origin, but still problematic since some operations can take a long time. Introduce a callback function to check for a pending query cancel or session termination request, and call it in a couple of strategic spots where we can make the regex code exit with an error indicator. If we ever actually split out the regex code as a standalone library, some additional work will be needed to let the cancel callback function be specified externally to the library. But that's straightforward (certainly so by comparison to putting the locale-dependent character classification logic on a similar arms-length basis), and there seems no need to do it right now. A bigger issue is that there may be more places than these two where we need to check for cancels. We can always add more checks later, now that the infrastructure is in place. Since there are known examples of not-terribly-long regexes that can lock up a backend for a long time, back-patch to all supported branches. I have hopes of fixing the known performance problems later, but adding query cancel ability seems like a good idea even if they were all fixed.