Files
adler32
ahash
aho_corasick
ansi_term
antidote
anyhow
arc_swap
arrayvec
async_speed_limit
async_stream
async_stream_impl
async_trait
atty
aws
backtrace
backtrace_sys
backup
base64
batch_system
bitfield
bitflags
block_buffer
boolinator
bstr
byteorder
bytes
bzip2_sys
cargo_metadata
cdc
cfg_if
chrono
chrono_tz
clap
cloud
codec
collections
concurrency_manager
configuration
configuration_derive
const_fn
const_random
const_random_macro
coprocessor_plugin_api
cpuid_bool
crc32fast
crc64fast
crossbeam
crossbeam_channel
crossbeam_deque
crossbeam_epoch
crossbeam_queue
crossbeam_skiplist
crossbeam_utils
crypto_mac
darling
darling_core
darling_macro
dashmap
debugid
derive_more
digest
dirs
dirs_sys
doc_comment
dtoa
either
encoding_rs
encryption
encryption_export
engine_panic
engine_rocks
engine_test
engine_traits
engine_traits_tests
error_code
error_code_gen
example_plugin
external_storage
external_storage_export
fail
failure
failure_derive
farmhash
file_system
filetime
flate2
fnv
foreign_types
foreign_types_shared
fs2
futures
futures_channel
futures_core
futures_executor
futures_io
futures_macro
futures_sink
futures_task
futures_timer
futures_util
async_await
compat
future
io
lock
sink
stream
task
fuzz
fxhash
gcp
generic_array
getrandom
getset
grpcio
grpcio_health
grpcio_sys
h2
heck
hex
hmac
http
http_body
httparse
httpdate
hyper
hyper_openssl
hyper_tls
ident_case
idna
indexmap
inferno
inotify
inotify_sys
instant
into_other
iovec
ipnet
ipnetwork
itertools
itoa
keys
kvproto
lazy_static
lazycell
libc
libflate
libflate_lz77
libloading
librocksdb_sys
libtitan_sys
libz_sys
linked_hash_map
linked_hash_set
lock_api
log
log_wrappers
lz4_sys
match_template
matches
md5
memchr
memmap
memoffset
memory_trace_macros
mime
mime_guess
mio
mio_extras
mio_uds
more_asserts
murmur3
native_tls
net2
nix
nodrop
nom
notify
num
num_complex
num_cpus
num_derive
num_format
num_integer
num_iter
num_rational
num_traits
once_cell
opaque_debug
openssl
openssl_probe
openssl_sys
ordered_float
panic_hook
parking_lot
parking_lot_core
paste
paste_impl
pd_client
percent_encoding
pest
pin_project
pin_project_lite
pin_utils
pnet_base
pnet_datalink
pnet_sys
pprof
ppv_lite86
proc_macro2
proc_macro_error
proc_macro_error_attr
proc_macro_hack
proc_macro_nested
procfs
procinfo
profiler
prometheus
prometheus_static_metric
promptly
prost
prost_derive
protobuf
quick_xml
quote
raft
raft_engine
raft_log_engine
raft_proto
raftstore
rand
rand_chacha
rand_core
rand_isaac
rayon
rayon_core
regex
regex_automata
regex_syntax
remove_dir_all
reqwest
resolved_ts
rev_lines
rgb
ring
rle_decode_fast
rocksdb
rusoto_core
rusoto_credential
rusoto_kms
rusoto_s3
rusoto_signature
rusoto_sts
rustc_demangle
rustyline
ryu
safemem
same_file
scopeguard
security
semver
semver_parser
serde
serde_derive
serde_ignored
serde_json
serde_urlencoded
serde_with
serde_with_macros
server
sha2
shlex
signal
signal_hook_registry
slab
slog
slog_async
slog_derive
slog_global
slog_json
slog_term
smallvec
snappy_sys
socket2
spin
sst_importer
stable_deref_trait
standback
static_assertions
str_stack
strsim
structopt
structopt_derive
strum
strum_macros
subtle
symbolic_common
symbolic_demangle
syn
syn_mid
synstructure
sysinfo
take_mut
tame_gcs
tame_oauth
tempfile
term
test_backup
test_coprocessor
test_pd
test_raftstore
test_sst_importer
test_storage
test_util
textwrap
thiserror
thiserror_impl
thread_local
tidb_query_aggr
tidb_query_codegen
tidb_query_common
tidb_query_datatype
tidb_query_executors
tidb_query_expr
tikv
coprocessor
coprocessor_v2
import
server
storage
tikv_alloc
tikv_ctl
tikv_jemalloc_ctl
tikv_jemalloc_sys
tikv_jemallocator
tikv_kv
tikv_server
tikv_util
time
time_macros
time_macros_impl
tipb
tipb_helper
tokio
fs
future
io
loom
macros
net
park
process
runtime
signal
stream
sync
task
time
util
tokio_executor
tokio_macros
tokio_openssl
tokio_timer
tokio_tls
tokio_util
toml
tower_service
tracing
tracing_core
try_lock
twoway
twox_hash
txn_types
typenum
ucd_trie
unchecked_index
unicase
unicode_bidi
unicode_normalization
unicode_segmentation
unicode_width
unicode_xid
untrusted
url
utf8parse
uuid
vec_map
vlog
walkdir
want
xml
yatp
zeroize
zstd_sys
  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
  8
  9
 10
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
 18
 19
 20
 21
 22
 23
 24
 25
 26
 27
 28
 29
 30
 31
 32
 33
 34
 35
 36
 37
 38
 39
 40
 41
 42
 43
 44
 45
 46
 47
 48
 49
 50
 51
 52
 53
 54
 55
 56
 57
 58
 59
 60
 61
 62
 63
 64
 65
 66
 67
 68
 69
 70
 71
 72
 73
 74
 75
 76
 77
 78
 79
 80
 81
 82
 83
 84
 85
 86
 87
 88
 89
 90
 91
 92
 93
 94
 95
 96
 97
 98
 99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
macro_rules! define_set {
    ($name:ident, $builder_mod:ident, $text_ty:ty, $as_bytes:expr,
     $(#[$doc_regexset_example:meta])* ) => {
        pub mod $name {
            use std::fmt;
            use std::iter;
            use std::slice;
            use std::vec;

            use error::Error;
            use exec::Exec;
            use re_builder::$builder_mod::RegexSetBuilder;
            use re_trait::RegularExpression;

/// Match multiple (possibly overlapping) regular expressions in a single scan.
///
/// A regex set corresponds to the union of two or more regular expressions.
/// That is, a regex set will match text where at least one of its
/// constituent regular expressions matches. A regex set as its formulated here
/// provides a touch more power: it will also report *which* regular
/// expressions in the set match. Indeed, this is the key difference between
/// regex sets and a single `Regex` with many alternates, since only one
/// alternate can match at a time.
///
/// For example, consider regular expressions to match email addresses and
/// domains: `[a-z]+@[a-z]+\.(com|org|net)` and `[a-z]+\.(com|org|net)`. If a
/// regex set is constructed from those regexes, then searching the text
/// `foo@example.com` will report both regexes as matching. Of course, one
/// could accomplish this by compiling each regex on its own and doing two
/// searches over the text. The key advantage of using a regex set is that it
/// will report the matching regexes using a *single pass through the text*.
/// If one has hundreds or thousands of regexes to match repeatedly (like a URL
/// router for a complex web application or a user agent matcher), then a regex
/// set can realize huge performance gains.
///
/// # Example
///
/// This shows how the above two regexes (for matching email addresses and
/// domains) might work:
///
$(#[$doc_regexset_example])*
///
/// Note that it would be possible to adapt the above example to using `Regex`
/// with an expression like:
///
/// ```ignore
/// (?P<email>[a-z]+@(?P<email_domain>[a-z]+[.](com|org|net)))|(?P<domain>[a-z]+[.](com|org|net))
/// ```
///
/// After a match, one could then inspect the capture groups to figure out
/// which alternates matched. The problem is that it is hard to make this
/// approach scale when there are many regexes since the overlap between each
/// alternate isn't always obvious to reason about.
///
/// # Limitations
///
/// Regex sets are limited to answering the following two questions:
///
/// 1. Does any regex in the set match?
/// 2. If so, which regexes in the set match?
///
/// As with the main `Regex` type, it is cheaper to ask (1) instead of (2)
/// since the matching engines can stop after the first match is found.
///
/// Other features like finding the location of successive matches or their
/// sub-captures aren't supported. If you need this functionality, the
/// recommended approach is to compile each regex in the set independently and
/// selectively match them based on which regexes in the set matched.
///
/// # Performance
///
/// A `RegexSet` has the same performance characteristics as `Regex`. Namely,
/// search takes `O(mn)` time, where `m` is proportional to the size of the
/// regex set and `n` is proportional to the length of the search text.
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct RegexSet(Exec);

impl RegexSet {
    /// Create a new regex set with the given regular expressions.
    ///
    /// This takes an iterator of `S`, where `S` is something that can produce
    /// a `&str`. If any of the strings in the iterator are not valid regular
    /// expressions, then an error is returned.
    ///
    /// # Example
    ///
    /// Create a new regex set from an iterator of strings:
    ///
    /// ```rust
    /// # use regex::RegexSet;
    /// let set = RegexSet::new(&[r"\w+", r"\d+"]).unwrap();
    /// assert!(set.is_match("foo"));
    /// ```
    pub fn new<I, S>(exprs: I) -> Result<RegexSet, Error>
            where S: AsRef<str>, I: IntoIterator<Item=S> {
        RegexSetBuilder::new(exprs).build()
    }

    /// Create a new empty regex set.
    ///
    /// # Example
    ///
    /// ```rust
    /// # use regex::RegexSet;
    /// let set = RegexSet::empty();
    /// assert!(set.is_empty());
    /// ```
    pub fn empty() -> RegexSet {
        RegexSetBuilder::new(&[""; 0]).build().unwrap()
    }

    /// Returns true if and only if one of the regexes in this set matches
    /// the text given.
    ///
    /// This method should be preferred if you only need to test whether any
    /// of the regexes in the set should match, but don't care about *which*
    /// regexes matched. This is because the underlying matching engine will
    /// quit immediately after seeing the first match instead of continuing to
    /// find all matches.
    ///
    /// Note that as with searches using `Regex`, the expression is unanchored
    /// by default. That is, if the regex does not start with `^` or `\A`, or
    /// end with `$` or `\z`, then it is permitted to match anywhere in the
    /// text.
    ///
    /// # Example
    ///
    /// Tests whether a set matches some text:
    ///
    /// ```rust
    /// # use regex::RegexSet;
    /// let set = RegexSet::new(&[r"\w+", r"\d+"]).unwrap();
    /// assert!(set.is_match("foo"));
    /// assert!(!set.is_match("☃"));
    /// ```
    pub fn is_match(&self, text: $text_ty) -> bool {
        self.is_match_at(text, 0)
    }

    /// Returns the same as is_match, but starts the search at the given
    /// offset.
    ///
    /// The significance of the starting point is that it takes the surrounding
    /// context into consideration. For example, the `\A` anchor can only
    /// match when `start == 0`.
    #[doc(hidden)]
    pub fn is_match_at(&self, text: $text_ty, start: usize) -> bool {
        self.0.searcher().is_match_at($as_bytes(text), start)
    }

    /// Returns the set of regular expressions that match in the given text.
    ///
    /// The set returned contains the index of each regular expression that
    /// matches in the given text. The index is in correspondence with the
    /// order of regular expressions given to `RegexSet`'s constructor.
    ///
    /// The set can also be used to iterate over the matched indices.
    ///
    /// Note that as with searches using `Regex`, the expression is unanchored
    /// by default. That is, if the regex does not start with `^` or `\A`, or
    /// end with `$` or `\z`, then it is permitted to match anywhere in the
    /// text.
    ///
    /// # Example
    ///
    /// Tests which regular expressions match the given text:
    ///
    /// ```rust
    /// # use regex::RegexSet;
    /// let set = RegexSet::new(&[
    ///     r"\w+",
    ///     r"\d+",
    ///     r"\pL+",
    ///     r"foo",
    ///     r"bar",
    ///     r"barfoo",
    ///     r"foobar",
    /// ]).unwrap();
    /// let matches: Vec<_> = set.matches("foobar").into_iter().collect();
    /// assert_eq!(matches, vec![0, 2, 3, 4, 6]);
    ///
    /// // You can also test whether a particular regex matched:
    /// let matches = set.matches("foobar");
    /// assert!(!matches.matched(5));
    /// assert!(matches.matched(6));
    /// ```
    pub fn matches(&self, text: $text_ty) -> SetMatches {
        let mut matches = vec![false; self.0.regex_strings().len()];
        let any = self.read_matches_at(&mut matches, text, 0);
        SetMatches {
            matched_any: any,
            matches: matches,
        }
    }

    /// Returns the same as matches, but starts the search at the given
    /// offset and stores the matches into the slice given.
    ///
    /// The significance of the starting point is that it takes the surrounding
    /// context into consideration. For example, the `\A` anchor can only
    /// match when `start == 0`.
    ///
    /// `matches` must have a length that is at least the number of regexes
    /// in this set.
    ///
    /// This method returns true if and only if at least one member of
    /// `matches` is true after executing the set against `text`.
    #[doc(hidden)]
    pub fn read_matches_at(
        &self,
        matches: &mut [bool],
        text: $text_ty,
        start: usize,
    ) -> bool {
        self.0.searcher().many_matches_at(matches, $as_bytes(text), start)
    }

    /// Returns the total number of regular expressions in this set.
    pub fn len(&self) -> usize {
        self.0.regex_strings().len()
    }

    /// Returns `true` if this set contains no regular expressions.
    pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
        self.0.regex_strings().is_empty()
    }

    /// Returns the patterns that this set will match on.
    ///
    /// This function can be used to determine the pattern for a match. The
    /// slice returned has exactly as many patterns givens to this regex set,
    /// and the order of the slice is the same as the order of the patterns
    /// provided to the set.
    ///
    /// # Example
    ///
    /// ```rust
    /// # use regex::RegexSet;
    /// let set = RegexSet::new(&[
    ///     r"\w+",
    ///     r"\d+",
    ///     r"\pL+",
    ///     r"foo",
    ///     r"bar",
    ///     r"barfoo",
    ///     r"foobar",
    /// ]).unwrap();
    /// let matches: Vec<_> = set
    ///     .matches("foobar")
    ///     .into_iter()
    ///     .map(|match_idx| &set.patterns()[match_idx])
    ///     .collect();
    /// assert_eq!(matches, vec![r"\w+", r"\pL+", r"foo", r"bar", r"foobar"]);
    /// ```
    pub fn patterns(&self) -> &[String] {
        self.0.regex_strings()
    }
}

/// A set of matches returned by a regex set.
#[derive(Clone, Debug)]
pub struct SetMatches {
    matched_any: bool,
    matches: Vec<bool>,
}

impl SetMatches {
    /// Whether this set contains any matches.
    pub fn matched_any(&self) -> bool {
        self.matched_any
    }

    /// Whether the regex at the given index matched.
    ///
    /// The index for a regex is determined by its insertion order upon the
    /// initial construction of a `RegexSet`, starting at `0`.
    ///
    /// # Panics
    ///
    /// If `regex_index` is greater than or equal to `self.len()`.
    pub fn matched(&self, regex_index: usize) -> bool {
        self.matches[regex_index]
    }

    /// The total number of regexes in the set that created these matches.
    pub fn len(&self) -> usize {
        self.matches.len()
    }

    /// Returns an iterator over indexes in the regex that matched.
    ///
    /// This will always produces matches in ascending order of index, where
    /// the index corresponds to the index of the regex that matched with
    /// respect to its position when initially building the set.
    pub fn iter(&self) -> SetMatchesIter {
        SetMatchesIter((&*self.matches).into_iter().enumerate())
    }
}

impl IntoIterator for SetMatches {
    type IntoIter = SetMatchesIntoIter;
    type Item = usize;

    fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter {
        SetMatchesIntoIter(self.matches.into_iter().enumerate())
    }
}

impl<'a> IntoIterator for &'a SetMatches {
    type IntoIter = SetMatchesIter<'a>;
    type Item = usize;

    fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter {
        self.iter()
    }
}

/// An owned iterator over the set of matches from a regex set.
///
/// This will always produces matches in ascending order of index, where the
/// index corresponds to the index of the regex that matched with respect to
/// its position when initially building the set.
pub struct SetMatchesIntoIter(iter::Enumerate<vec::IntoIter<bool>>);

impl Iterator for SetMatchesIntoIter {
    type Item = usize;

    fn next(&mut self) -> Option<usize> {
        loop {
            match self.0.next() {
                None => return None,
                Some((_, false)) => {}
                Some((i, true)) => return Some(i),
            }
        }
    }

    fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
        self.0.size_hint()
    }
}

impl DoubleEndedIterator for SetMatchesIntoIter {
    fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<usize> {
        loop {
            match self.0.next_back() {
                None => return None,
                Some((_, false)) => {}
                Some((i, true)) => return Some(i),
            }
        }
    }
}

/// A borrowed iterator over the set of matches from a regex set.
///
/// The lifetime `'a` refers to the lifetime of a `SetMatches` value.
///
/// This will always produces matches in ascending order of index, where the
/// index corresponds to the index of the regex that matched with respect to
/// its position when initially building the set.
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct SetMatchesIter<'a>(iter::Enumerate<slice::Iter<'a, bool>>);

impl<'a> Iterator for SetMatchesIter<'a> {
    type Item = usize;

    fn next(&mut self) -> Option<usize> {
        loop {
            match self.0.next() {
                None => return None,
                Some((_, &false)) => {}
                Some((i, &true)) => return Some(i),
            }
        }
    }

    fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
        self.0.size_hint()
    }
}

impl<'a> DoubleEndedIterator for SetMatchesIter<'a> {
    fn next_back(&mut self) -> Option<usize> {
        loop {
            match self.0.next_back() {
                None => return None,
                Some((_, &false)) => {}
                Some((i, &true)) => return Some(i),
            }
        }
    }
}

#[doc(hidden)]
impl From<Exec> for RegexSet {
    fn from(exec: Exec) -> Self {
        RegexSet(exec)
    }
}

impl fmt::Debug for RegexSet {
    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
        write!(f, "RegexSet({:?})", self.0.regex_strings())
    }
}

#[allow(dead_code)] fn as_bytes_str(text: &str) -> &[u8] { text.as_bytes() }
#[allow(dead_code)] fn as_bytes_bytes(text: &[u8]) -> &[u8] { text }
        }
    }
}

define_set! {
    unicode,
    set_unicode,
    &str,
    as_bytes_str,
/// ```rust
/// # use regex::RegexSet;
/// let set = RegexSet::new(&[
///     r"[a-z]+@[a-z]+\.(com|org|net)",
///     r"[a-z]+\.(com|org|net)",
/// ]).unwrap();
///
/// // Ask whether any regexes in the set match.
/// assert!(set.is_match("foo@example.com"));
///
/// // Identify which regexes in the set match.
/// let matches: Vec<_> = set.matches("foo@example.com").into_iter().collect();
/// assert_eq!(vec![0, 1], matches);
///
/// // Try again, but with text that only matches one of the regexes.
/// let matches: Vec<_> = set.matches("example.com").into_iter().collect();
/// assert_eq!(vec![1], matches);
///
/// // Try again, but with text that doesn't match any regex in the set.
/// let matches: Vec<_> = set.matches("example").into_iter().collect();
/// assert!(matches.is_empty());
/// ```
}

define_set! {
    bytes,
    set_bytes,
    &[u8],
    as_bytes_bytes,
/// ```rust
/// # use regex::bytes::RegexSet;
/// let set = RegexSet::new(&[
///     r"[a-z]+@[a-z]+\.(com|org|net)",
///     r"[a-z]+\.(com|org|net)",
/// ]).unwrap();
///
/// // Ask whether any regexes in the set match.
/// assert!(set.is_match(b"foo@example.com"));
///
/// // Identify which regexes in the set match.
/// let matches: Vec<_> = set.matches(b"foo@example.com").into_iter().collect();
/// assert_eq!(vec![0, 1], matches);
///
/// // Try again, but with text that only matches one of the regexes.
/// let matches: Vec<_> = set.matches(b"example.com").into_iter().collect();
/// assert_eq!(vec![1], matches);
///
/// // Try again, but with text that doesn't match any regex in the set.
/// let matches: Vec<_> = set.matches(b"example").into_iter().collect();
/// assert!(matches.is_empty());
/// ```
}