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Unexpected behavior of ungreedy ?? operator #862
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Wow. Yes, this is a bug. I am amazed that this isn't captured by the test suite. Non-greediness itself works (both fn main() {
let rx = regex::Regex::new("ab??").unwrap();
let input = "abb";
let mat = rx.find(input).unwrap();
println!("match: {}", &input[mat.range()]);
let rx = regex::Regex::new("ab+?").unwrap();
let input = "abb";
let mat = rx.find(input).unwrap();
println!("match: {}", &input[mat.range()]);
let rx = regex::Regex::new("ab*?").unwrap();
let input = "abb";
let mat = rx.find(input).unwrap();
println!("match: {}", &input[mat.range()]);
} Outputs:
Playground: https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=da2560ea6ce7655338ef34101cf5eab3 |
Gah. This is another literal optimization bug. They are going to be the death of me. The regex |
This actually a regression that was introduced in |
OK, so I at least understand the root cause. The root issue seems to be the order of literals extracted from the regex. For example:
Since both literals are marked as "complete" (which means that if a match is found we can report a match for the overall regex and avoid using the regex engine to confirm the match), which is correct in this case, the regex crate will divert to using Aho-Corasick for this. It correctly uses "leftmost first" match semantics, which matches how the regex crate does things. But since So why does
The latter is correct. The former generates literals in the wrong order, but since once of them is Interestingly, despite the regex
This is actually because in the code, the literal extraction isn't perfect and we treat bounded repetitions slightly differently. In this case, any bounded repetition
Since literal extraction is on my list of things to rewrite (the current implementation is quite bad and inscrutable), I'm going to just make an easy fix: treat |
Previously, 'ab??' returned [Complete(ab), Complete(a)], but the order matters here because of greediness. The correct result is [Complete(a), Complete(ab)]. Instead of trying to actually fix literal extraction (which is a mess), we just rewrite 'ab?' (and 'ab??') as 'ab*'. 'ab*' still produces literals in the incorrect order, i.e., [Cut(ab), Complete(a)], but since one is cut we are guaranteed that the regex engine will be called to confirm the match. In so doing, it will correctly report 'a' as a match for 'ab??' in 'ab'. Fixes #862
Previously, 'ab??' returned [Complete(ab), Complete(a)], but the order matters here because of greediness. The correct result is [Complete(a), Complete(ab)]. Instead of trying to actually fix literal extraction (which is a mess), we just rewrite 'ab?' (and 'ab??') as 'ab*'. 'ab*' still produces literals in the incorrect order, i.e., [Cut(ab), Complete(a)], but since one is cut we are guaranteed that the regex engine will be called to confirm the match. In so doing, it will correctly report 'a' as a match for 'ab??' in 'ab'. Fixes #862
Previously, 'ab??' returned [Complete(ab), Complete(a)], but the order matters here because of greediness. The correct result is [Complete(a), Complete(ab)]. Instead of trying to actually fix literal extraction (which is a mess), we just rewrite 'ab?' (and 'ab??') as 'ab*'. 'ab*' still produces literals in the incorrect order, i.e., [Cut(ab), Complete(a)], but since one is cut we are guaranteed that the regex engine will be called to confirm the match. In so doing, it will correctly report 'a' as a match for 'ab??' in 'ab'. Fixes #862
This bug is fixed in |
That was fast! Thanks for the fix and the very detailed explanation! |
Bump regex from 1.5.4 to 1.5.6 Bumps regex from 1.5.4 to 1.5.6. Changelog Sourced from regex's changelog. 1.5.6 (2022-05-20) This release includes a few bug fixes, including a bug that produced incorrect matches when a non-greedy ? operator was used. [BUG #680](rust-lang/regex#680): Fixes a bug where [[:alnum:][:^ascii:]] dropped [:alnum:] from the class. [BUG #859](rust-lang/regex#859): Fixes a bug where Hir::is_match_empty returned false for \b. [BUG #862](rust-lang/regex#862): Fixes a bug where 'ab??' matches 'ab' instead of 'a' in 'ab'. 1.5.5 (2022-03-08) This releases fixes a security bug in the regex compiler. This bug permits a vector for a denial-of-service attack in cases where the regex being compiled is untrusted. There are no known problems where the regex is itself trusted, including in cases of untrusted haystacks. SECURITY #GHSA-m5pq-gvj9-9vr8: Fixes a bug in the regex compiler where empty sub-expressions subverted the existing mitigations in place to enforce a size limit on compiled regexes. The Rust Security Response WG published an advisory about this: https://groups.google.com/g/rustlang-security-announcements/c/NcNNL1Jq7Yw Commits 9aef5b1 1.5.6 2931b07 syntax: bump minimum regex-syntax version to 0.6.26 b41bde0 regex-syntax-0.6.26 d98da65 changelog: 1.5.6 1c19619 syntax: fix literal extraction for 'ab??' 88a2a62 syntax: fix 'is_match_empty' predicate 72f09f1 syntax: fix ascii class union bug b537286 doc: fix some typos 258bdf7 changelog: 1.5.5 d130381 1.5.5 Additional commits viewable in compare view Dependabot will resolve any conflicts with this PR as long as you don't alter it yourself. You can also trigger a rebase manually by commenting @dependabot rebase. Dependabot commands and options You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR: @dependabot rebase will rebase this PR @dependabot recreate will recreate this PR, overwriting any edits that have been made to it @dependabot merge will merge this PR after your CI passes on it @dependabot squash and merge will squash and merge this PR after your CI passes on it @dependabot cancel merge will cancel a previously requested merge and block automerging @dependabot reopen will reopen this PR if it is closed @dependabot close will close this PR and stop Dependabot recreating it. You can achieve the same result by closing it manually @dependabot ignore this major version will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this major version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself) @dependabot ignore this minor version will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this minor version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself) @dependabot ignore this dependency will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this dependency (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself) @dependabot use these labels will set the current labels as the default for future PRs for this repo and language @dependabot use these reviewers will set the current reviewers as the default for future PRs for this repo and language @dependabot use these assignees will set the current assignees as the default for future PRs for this repo and language @dependabot use this milestone will set the current milestone as the default for future PRs for this repo and language You can disable automated security fix PRs for this repo from the Security Alerts page. Reviewed-by: Artem Goncharov <Artem.goncharov@gmail.com>
What version of regex are you using?
1.5.5
Describe the bug at a high level.
Running the regex
ab??
on the inputab
returns the matchab
instead ofa
.What are the steps to reproduce the behavior?
What is the actual behavior?
This program returns:
ab
What is the expected behavior?
I expect the output to be
a
, since??
is non greedy, it should favor not matching the second letter in the input.All other implementations i could find matches on
a
only.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: