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-rw-r--r--doc/html/pcrecompat.html128
-rw-r--r--doc/html/pcregrep.html153
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-rw-r--r--doc/html/pcreposix.html235
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+<html>
+<head>
+<title>PCRE specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+<h1>Perl-compatible Regular Expressions (PCRE)</h1>
+<p>
+The HTML documentation for PCRE comprises the following pages:
+</p>
+
+<table>
+<tr><td><a href="pcre.html">pcre</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Introductory page</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcreapi.html">pcreapi</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;PCRE's native API</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcrebuild.html">pcrebuild</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Options for building PCRE</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcrecallout.html">pcrecallout</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;The <i>callout</i> facility</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcrecompat.html">pcrecompat</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Compability with Perl</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcregrep.html">pcregrep</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;The <b>pcregrep</b> command</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcrepattern.html">pcrepattern</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Regular expressions supported by PCRE</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcreperform.html">pcreperform</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Some comments on performance</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcreposix.html">pcreposix</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;The POSIX API to the PCRE library</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcresample.html">pcresample</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Description of the sample program</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcretest.html">pcretest</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;The <b>pcretest</b> command for testing PCRE</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>
+There are also individual pages that summarize the interface for each function
+in the library:
+</p>
+
+<table>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_compile.html">pcre_compile</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Compile a regular expression</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_config.html">pcre_config</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Show build-time configuration options</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_copy_named_substring.html">pcre_copy_named_substring</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Extract named substring into given buffer</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_copy_substring.html">pcre_copy_substring</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Extract numbered substring into given buffer</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_exec.html">pcre_exec</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Match a compiled pattern to a subject string</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_free_substring.html">pcre_free_substring</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Free extracted substring</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_free_substring_list.html">pcre_free_substring_list</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Free list of extracted substrings</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_fullinfo.html">pcre_fullinfo</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Extract information about a pattern</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_get_named_substring.html">pcre_get_named_substring</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Extract named substring into new memory</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_get_stringnumber.html">pcre_get_stringnumber</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Convert captured string name to number</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_get_substring.html">pcre_get_substring</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Extract numbered substring into new memory</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_get_substring_list.html">pcre_get_substring_list</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Extract all substrings into new memory</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_info.html">pcre_info</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Obsolete information extraction function</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_maketables.html">pcre_maketables</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Build character tables in current locale</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_study.html">pcre_study</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Study a compiled pattern</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td><a href="pcre_version.html">pcre_version</a></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;Return PCRE version and release date</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+</html>
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre.html b/doc/html/pcre.html
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+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">DESCRIPTION</a>
+<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">USER DOCUMENTATION</a>
+<li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">LIMITATIONS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">UTF-8 SUPPORT</a>
+<li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">AUTHOR</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
+<P>
+The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement regular expression
+pattern matching using the same syntax and semantics as Perl, with just a few
+differences. The current implementation of PCRE (release 4.x) corresponds
+approximately with Perl 5.8, including support for UTF-8 encoded strings.
+However, this support has to be explicitly enabled; it is not the default.
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE is written in C and released as a C library. However, a number of people
+have written wrappers and interfaces of various kinds. A C++ class is included
+in these contributions, which can be found in the <i>Contrib</i> directory at
+the primary FTP site, which is:
+</P>
+<a href="ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre">ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre</a>
+<P>
+Details of exactly which Perl regular expression features are and are not
+supported by PCRE are given in separate documents. See the
+<a href="pcrepattern.html"><b>pcrepattern</b></a>
+and
+<a href="pcrecompat.html"><b>pcrecompat</b></a>
+pages.
+</P>
+<P>
+Some features of PCRE can be included, excluded, or changed when the library is
+built. The
+<a href="pcre_config.html"><b>pcre_config()</b></a>
+function makes it possible for a client to discover which features are
+available. Documentation about building PCRE for various operating systems can
+be found in the <b>README</b> file in the source distribution.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">USER DOCUMENTATION</a><br>
+<P>
+The user documentation for PCRE has been split up into a number of different
+sections. In the "man" format, each of these is a separate "man page". In the
+HTML format, each is a separate page, linked from the index page. In the plain
+text format, all the sections are concatenated, for ease of searching. The
+sections are as follows:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ pcre this document
+ pcreapi details of PCRE's native API
+ pcrebuild options for building PCRE
+ pcrecallout details of the callout feature
+ pcrecompat discussion of Perl compatibility
+ pcregrep description of the <b>pcregrep</b> command
+ pcrepattern syntax and semantics of supported
+ regular expressions
+ pcreperform discussion of performance issues
+ pcreposix the POSIX-compatible API
+ pcresample discussion of the sample program
+ pcretest the <b>pcretest</b> testing command
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+In addition, in the "man" and HTML formats, there is a short page for each
+library function, listing its arguments and results.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">LIMITATIONS</a><br>
+<P>
+There are some size limitations in PCRE but it is hoped that they will never in
+practice be relevant.
+</P>
+<P>
+The maximum length of a compiled pattern is 65539 (sic) bytes if PCRE is
+compiled with the default internal linkage size of 2. If you want to process
+regular expressions that are truly enormous, you can compile PCRE with an
+internal linkage size of 3 or 4 (see the <b>README</b> file in the source
+distribution and the
+<a href="pcrebuild.html"><b>pcrebuild</b></a>
+documentation for details). If these cases the limit is substantially larger.
+However, the speed of execution will be slower.
+</P>
+<P>
+All values in repeating quantifiers must be less than 65536.
+The maximum number of capturing subpatterns is 65535.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is no limit to the number of non-capturing subpatterns, but the maximum
+depth of nesting of all kinds of parenthesized subpattern, including capturing
+subpatterns, assertions, and other types of subpattern, is 200.
+</P>
+<P>
+The maximum length of a subject string is the largest positive number that an
+integer variable can hold. However, PCRE uses recursion to handle subpatterns
+and indefinite repetition. This means that the available stack space may limit
+the size of a subject string that can be processed by certain patterns.
+</P>
+<a name="utf8support"></a><br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">UTF-8 SUPPORT</a><br>
+<P>
+Starting at release 3.3, PCRE has had some support for character strings
+encoded in the UTF-8 format. For release 4.0 this has been greatly extended to
+cover most common requirements.
+</P>
+<P>
+In order process UTF-8 strings, you must build PCRE to include UTF-8 support in
+the code, and, in addition, you must call
+<a href="pcre_compile.html"><b>pcre_compile()</b></a>
+with the PCRE_UTF8 option flag. When you do this, both the pattern and any
+subject strings that are matched against it are treated as UTF-8 strings
+instead of just strings of bytes.
+</P>
+<P>
+If you compile PCRE with UTF-8 support, but do not use it at run time, the
+library will be a bit bigger, but the additional run time overhead is limited
+to testing the PCRE_UTF8 flag in several places, so should not be very large.
+</P>
+<P>
+The following comments apply when PCRE is running in UTF-8 mode:
+</P>
+<P>
+1. PCRE assumes that the strings it is given contain valid UTF-8 codes. It does
+not diagnose invalid UTF-8 strings. If you pass invalid UTF-8 strings to PCRE,
+the results are undefined.
+</P>
+<P>
+2. In a pattern, the escape sequence \x{...}, where the contents of the braces
+is a string of hexadecimal digits, is interpreted as a UTF-8 character whose
+code number is the given hexadecimal number, for example: \x{1234}. If a
+non-hexadecimal digit appears between the braces, the item is not recognized.
+This escape sequence can be used either as a literal, or within a character
+class.
+</P>
+<P>
+3. The original hexadecimal escape sequence, \xhh, matches a two-byte UTF-8
+character if the value is greater than 127.
+</P>
+<P>
+4. Repeat quantifiers apply to complete UTF-8 characters, not to individual
+bytes, for example: \x{100}{3}.
+</P>
+<P>
+5. The dot metacharacter matches one UTF-8 character instead of a single byte.
+</P>
+<P>
+6. The escape sequence \C can be used to match a single byte in UTF-8 mode,
+but its use can lead to some strange effects.
+</P>
+<P>
+7. The character escapes \b, \B, \d, \D, \s, \S, \w, and \W correctly
+test characters of any code value, but the characters that PCRE recognizes as
+digits, spaces, or word characters remain the same set as before, all with
+values less than 256.
+</P>
+<P>
+8. Case-insensitive matching applies only to characters whose values are less
+than 256. PCRE does not support the notion of "case" for higher-valued
+characters.
+</P>
+<P>
+9. PCRE does not support the use of Unicode tables and properties or the Perl
+escapes \p, \P, and \X.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
+<P>
+Philip Hazel &#60;ph10@cam.ac.uk&#62;
+<br>
+University Computing Service,
+<br>
+Cambridge CB2 3QG, England.
+<br>
+Phone: +44 1223 334714
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 04 February 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_compile.html b/doc/html/pcre_compile.html
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+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_compile specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>pcre *pcre_compile(const char *<i>pattern</i>, int <i>options</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>errptr</i>, int *<i>erroffset</i>,</b>
+<b>const unsigned char *<i>tableptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This function compiles a regular expression into an internal form. Its
+arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>pattern</i> A zero-terminated string containing the
+ regular expression to be compiled
+ <i>options</i> Zero or more option bits
+ <i>errptr</i> Where to put an error message
+ <i>erroffset</i> Offset in pattern where error was found
+ <i>tableptr</i> Pointer to character tables, or NULL to
+ use the built-in default
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The option bits are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ANCHORED Force pattern anchoring
+ PCRE_CASELESS Do caseless matching
+ PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY $ not to match newline at end
+ PCRE_DOTALL . matches anything including NL
+ PCRE_EXTENDED Ignore whitespace and # comments
+ PCRE_EXTRA PCRE extra features
+ (not much use currently)
+ PCRE_MULTILINE ^ and $ match newlines within data
+ PCRE_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE Disable numbered capturing paren-
+ theses (named ones available)
+ PCRE_UNGREEDY Invert greediness of quantifiers
+ PCRE_UTF8 Run in UTF-8 mode
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE must have been compiled with UTF-8 support when PCRE_UTF8 is used.
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield of the function is a pointer to a private data structure that
+contains the compiled pattern, or NULL if an error was detected.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_config.html b/doc/html/pcre_config.html
new file mode 100644
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_config.html
@@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_config specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_config(int <i>what</i>, void *<i>where</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This function makes it possible for a client program to find out which optional
+features are available in the version of the PCRE library it is using. Its
+arguments are as follows:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>what</i> A code specifying what information is required
+ <i>where</i> Points to where to put the data
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The available codes are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_CONFIG_LINK_SIZE Internal link size: 2, 3, or 4
+ PCRE_CONFIG_MATCH_LIMIT Internal resource limit
+ PCRE_CONFIG_NEWLINE Value of the newline character
+ PCRE_CONFIG_POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD
+ Threshold of return slots, above
+ which <b>malloc()</b> is used by
+ the POSIX API
+ PCRE_CONFIG_UTF8 Availability of UTF-8 support
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The function yields 0 on success or PCRE_ERROR_BADOPTION otherwise.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE native API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page, and a description of the POSIX API in the
+<a href="pcreposix.html"><b>pcreposix</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_copy_named_substring.html b/doc/html/pcre_copy_named_substring.html
new file mode 100644
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@@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_copy_named_substring specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_copy_named_substring(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, const char *<i>stringname</i>,</b>
+<b>char *<i>buffer</i>, int <i>buffersize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This is a convenience function for extracting a captured substring, identified
+by name, into a given buffer. The arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>code</i> Pattern that was successfully matched
+ <i>subject</i> Subject that has been successfully matched
+ <i>ovector</i> Offset vector that <b>pcre_exec()</b> used
+ <i>stringcount</i> Value returned by <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+ <i>stringname</i> Name of the required substring
+ <i>buffer</i> Buffer to receive the string
+ <i>buffersize</i> Size of buffer
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield is the length of the substring, PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY if the buffer was
+too small, or PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING if the string name is invalid.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_copy_substring.html b/doc/html/pcre_copy_substring.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f5b9b55
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_copy_substring.html
@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_copy_substring specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_copy_substring(const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, int <i>stringnumber</i>, char *<i>buffer</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>buffersize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This is a convenience function for extracting a captured substring into a given
+buffer. The arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>subject</i> Subject that has been successfully matched
+ <i>ovector</i> Offset vector that <b>pcre_exec()</b> used
+ <i>stringcount</i> Value returned by <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+ <i>stringnumber</i> Number of the required substring
+ <i>buffer</i> Buffer to receive the string
+ <i>buffersize</i> Size of buffer
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield is the legnth of the string, PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY if the buffer was
+too small, or PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING if the string number is invalid.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_exec.html b/doc/html/pcre_exec.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..915bc73
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_exec.html
@@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_exec specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_exec(const pcre *<i>code</i>, const pcre_extra *<i>extra</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int <i>length</i>, int <i>startoffset</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>options</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>, int <i>ovecsize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This function matches a compiled regular expression against a given subject
+string, and returns offsets to capturing subexpressions. Its arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>code</i> Points to the compiled pattern
+ <i>extra</i> Points to an associated <b>pcre_extra</b> structure,
+ or is NULL
+ <i>subject</i> Points to the subject string
+ <i>length</i> Length of the subject string, in bytes
+ <i>startoffset</i> Offset in bytes in the subject at which to
+ start matching
+ <i>options</i> Option bits
+ <i>ovector</i> Points to a vector of ints for result offsets
+ <i>ovecsize</i> Size of the vector (a multiple of 3)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The options are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ANCHORED Match only at the first position
+ PCRE_NOTBOL Subject is not the beginning of a line
+ PCRE_NOTEOL Subject is not the end of a line
+ PCRE_NOTEMPTY An empty string is not a valid match
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_free_substring.html b/doc/html/pcre_free_substring.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..08b1607
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_free_substring.html
@@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_free_substring specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>void pcre_free_substring(const char *<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This is a convenience function for freeing the store obtained by a previous
+call to <b>pcre_get_substring()</b> or <b>pcre_get_named_substring()</b>. Its
+only argument is a pointer to the string.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_free_substring_list.html b/doc/html/pcre_free_substring_list.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c130f28
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_free_substring_list.html
@@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_free_substring_list specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>void pcre_free_substring_list(const char **<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This is a convenience function for freeing the store obtained by a previous
+call to <b>pcre_get_substring_list()</b>. Its only argument is a pointer to the
+list of string pointers.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_fullinfo.html b/doc/html/pcre_fullinfo.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f43fa65
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_fullinfo.html
@@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_fullinfo specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_fullinfo(const pcre *<i>code</i>, const pcre_extra *<i>extra</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>what</i>, void *<i>where</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This function returns information about a compiled pattern. Its arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>code</i> Compiled regular expression
+ <i>extra</i> Result of <b>pcre_study()</b> or NULL
+ <i>what</i> What information is required
+ <i>where</i> Where to put the information
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The following information is available:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_BACKREFMAX Number of highest back reference
+ PCRE_INFO_CAPTURECOUNT Number of capturing subpatterns
+ PCRE_INFO_FIRSTBYTE Fixed first byte for a match, or
+ -1 for start of string
+ or after newline, or
+ -2 otherwise
+ PCRE_INFO_FIRSTTABLE Table of first bytes
+ (after studying)
+ PCRE_INFO_LASTLITERAL Literal last byte required
+ PCRE_INFO_NAMECOUNT Number of named subpatterns
+ PCRE_INFO_NAMEENTRYSIZE Size of name table entry
+ PCRE_INFO_NAMETABLE Pointer to name table
+ PCRE_INFO_OPTIONS Options used for compilation
+ PCRE_INFO_SIZE Size of compiled pattern
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield of the function is zero on success or:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NULL the argument <i>code</i> was NULL
+ the argument <i>where</i> was NULL
+ PCRE_ERROR_BADMAGIC the "magic number" was not found
+ PCRE_ERROR_BADOPTION the value of <i>what</i> was invalid
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_get_named_substring.html b/doc/html/pcre_get_named_substring.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..89a2bee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_get_named_substring.html
@@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_get_named_substring specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_named_substring(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, const char *<i>stringname</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This is a convenience function for extracting a captured substring by name. The
+arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>code</i> Compiled pattern
+ <i>subject</i> Subject that has been successfully matched
+ <i>ovector</i> Offset vector that <b>pcre_exec()</b> used
+ <i>stringcount</i> Value returned by <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+ <i>stringname</i> Name of the required substring
+ <i>stringptr</i> Where to put the string pointer
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield is the length of the extracted substring, PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY if
+sufficient memory could not be obtained, or PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING if the
+string name is invalid.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_get_stringnumber.html b/doc/html/pcre_get_stringnumber.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ee1c0a9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_get_stringnumber.html
@@ -0,0 +1,39 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_get_stringnumber specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_stringnumber(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>name</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This convenience function finds the number of a named substring capturing
+parenthesis in a compiled pattern. Its arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>code</i> Compiled regular expression
+ <i>name</i> Name whose number is required
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield of the function is the number of the parenthesis if the name is
+found, or PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING otherwise.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_get_substring.html b/doc/html/pcre_get_substring.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2a55c10
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_get_substring.html
@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_get_substring specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_substring(const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, int <i>stringnumber</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This is a convenience function for extracting a captured substring. The
+arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>subject</i> Subject that has been successfully matched
+ <i>ovector</i> Offset vector that <b>pcre_exec()</b> used
+ <i>stringcount</i> Value returned by <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+ <i>stringnumber</i> Number of the required substring
+ <i>stringptr</i> Where to put the string pointer
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield is the length of the substring, PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY if sufficient
+memory could not be obtained, or PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING if the string number is
+invalid.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_get_substring_list.html b/doc/html/pcre_get_substring_list.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7e91f56
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_get_substring_list.html
@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_get_substring_list specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_substring_list(const char *<i>subject</i>,</b>
+<b>int *<i>ovector</i>, int <i>stringcount</i>, const char ***<i>listptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This is a convenience function for extracting a list of all the captured
+substrings. The arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>subject</i> Subject that has been successfully matched
+ <i>ovector</i> Offset vector that <b>pcre_exec</b> used
+ <i>stringcount</i> Value returned by <b>pcre_exec</b>
+ <i>listptr</i> Where to put a pointer to the list
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield is zero on success or PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY if sufficient memory could
+not be obtained.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_info.html b/doc/html/pcre_info.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..97fc59b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_info.html
@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_info specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_info(const pcre *<i>code</i>, int *<i>optptr</i>, int</b>
+<b>*<i>firstcharptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This function is obsolete. You should be using <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> instead.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_maketables.html b/doc/html/pcre_maketables.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ba3e026
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_maketables.html
@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_maketables specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>const unsigned char *pcre_maketables(void);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This function builds a set of character tables which can be passed to
+<b>pcre_compile()</b> to override PCRE's internal, built-in tables (which were
+made by <b>pcre_maketables()</b> when PCRE was compiled). You might want to do
+this if you are using a non-standard locale. The function yields a pointer to
+the tables.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_study.html b/doc/html/pcre_study.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f3727d1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_study.html
@@ -0,0 +1,45 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_study specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>pcre_extra *pcre_study(const pcre *<i>code</i>, int <i>options</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>errptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This function studies a compiled pattern, to see if additional information can
+be extracted that might speed up matching. Its arguments are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <i>code</i> A compiled regular expression
+ <i>options</i> Options for <b>pcre_study()</b>
+ <i>errptr</i> Where to put an error message
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If the function returns NULL, either it could not find any additional
+information, or there was an error. You can tell the difference by looking at
+the error value. It is NULL in first case.
+</P>
+<P>
+There are currently no options defined; the value of the second argument should
+always be zero.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcre_version.html b/doc/html/pcre_version.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..35c47cd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcre_version.html
@@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcre_version specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<br><b>
+SYNOPSIS
+</b><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>char *pcre_version(void);</b>
+</P>
+<br><b>
+DESCRIPTION
+</b><br>
+<P>
+This function returns a character string that gives the version number of the
+PCRE library, and its date of release.
+</P>
+<P>
+There is a complete description of the PCRE API in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcreapi.html b/doc/html/pcreapi.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3bc71b1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcreapi.html
@@ -0,0 +1,1260 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcreapi specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">SYNOPSIS OF PCRE API</a>
+<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">PCRE API</a>
+<li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">MULTITHREADING</a>
+<li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">CHECKING BUILD-TIME OPTIONS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">COMPILING A PATTERN</a>
+<li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">STUDYING A PATTERN</a>
+<li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">LOCALE SUPPORT</a>
+<li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">INFORMATION ABOUT A PATTERN</a>
+<li><a name="TOC9" href="#SEC9">OBSOLETE INFO FUNCTION</a>
+<li><a name="TOC10" href="#SEC10">MATCHING A PATTERN</a>
+<li><a name="TOC11" href="#SEC11">EXTRACTING CAPTURED SUBSTRINGS BY NUMBER</a>
+<li><a name="TOC12" href="#SEC12">EXTRACTING CAPTURED SUBSTRINGS BY NAME</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">SYNOPSIS OF PCRE API</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcre.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>pcre *pcre_compile(const char *<i>pattern</i>, int <i>options</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>errptr</i>, int *<i>erroffset</i>,</b>
+<b>const unsigned char *<i>tableptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>pcre_extra *pcre_study(const pcre *<i>code</i>, int <i>options</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>errptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_exec(const pcre *<i>code</i>, const pcre_extra *<i>extra</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int <i>length</i>, int <i>startoffset</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>options</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>, int <i>ovecsize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_copy_named_substring(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, const char *<i>stringname</i>,</b>
+<b>char *<i>buffer</i>, int <i>buffersize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_copy_substring(const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, int <i>stringnumber</i>, char *<i>buffer</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>buffersize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_named_substring(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, const char *<i>stringname</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_stringnumber(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>name</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_substring(const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, int <i>stringnumber</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_substring_list(const char *<i>subject</i>,</b>
+<b>int *<i>ovector</i>, int <i>stringcount</i>, const char ***<i>listptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>void pcre_free_substring(const char *<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>void pcre_free_substring_list(const char **<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>const unsigned char *pcre_maketables(void);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_fullinfo(const pcre *<i>code</i>, const pcre_extra *<i>extra</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>what</i>, void *<i>where</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_info(const pcre *<i>code</i>, int *<i>optptr</i>, int</b>
+<b>*<i>firstcharptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_config(int <i>what</i>, void *<i>where</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>char *pcre_version(void);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>void *(*pcre_malloc)(size_t);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>void (*pcre_free)(void *);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int (*pcre_callout)(pcre_callout_block *);</b>
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">PCRE API</a><br>
+<P>
+PCRE has its own native API, which is described in this document. There is also
+a set of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular expression API.
+These are described in the <b>pcreposix</b> documentation.
+</P>
+<P>
+The native API function prototypes are defined in the header file <b>pcre.h</b>,
+and on Unix systems the library itself is called <b>libpcre.a</b>, so can be
+accessed by adding <b>-lpcre</b> to the command for linking an application which
+calls it. The header file defines the macros PCRE_MAJOR and PCRE_MINOR to
+contain the major and minor release numbers for the library. Applications can
+use these to include support for different releases.
+</P>
+<P>
+The functions <b>pcre_compile()</b>, <b>pcre_study()</b>, and <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+are used for compiling and matching regular expressions. A sample program that
+demonstrates the simplest way of using them is given in the file
+<i>pcredemo.c</i>. The <b>pcresample</b> documentation describes how to run it.
+</P>
+<P>
+There are convenience functions for extracting captured substrings from a
+matched subject string. They are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ <b>pcre_copy_substring()</b>
+ <b>pcre_copy_named_substring()</b>
+ <b>pcre_get_substring()</b>
+ <b>pcre_get_named_substring()</b>
+ <b>pcre_get_substring_list()</b>
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>pcre_free_substring()</b> and <b>pcre_free_substring_list()</b> are also
+provided, to free the memory used for extracted strings.
+</P>
+<P>
+The function <b>pcre_maketables()</b> is used (optionally) to build a set of
+character tables in the current locale for passing to <b>pcre_compile()</b>.
+</P>
+<P>
+The function <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> is used to find out information about a
+compiled pattern; <b>pcre_info()</b> is an obsolete version which returns only
+some of the available information, but is retained for backwards compatibility.
+The function <b>pcre_version()</b> returns a pointer to a string containing the
+version of PCRE and its date of release.
+</P>
+<P>
+The global variables <b>pcre_malloc</b> and <b>pcre_free</b> initially contain
+the entry points of the standard <b>malloc()</b> and <b>free()</b> functions
+respectively. PCRE calls the memory management functions via these variables,
+so a calling program can replace them if it wishes to intercept the calls. This
+should be done before calling any PCRE functions.
+</P>
+<P>
+The global variable <b>pcre_callout</b> initially contains NULL. It can be set
+by the caller to a "callout" function, which PCRE will then call at specified
+points during a matching operation. Details are given in the <b>pcrecallout</b>
+documentation.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">MULTITHREADING</a><br>
+<P>
+The PCRE functions can be used in multi-threading applications, with the
+proviso that the memory management functions pointed to by <b>pcre_malloc</b>
+and <b>pcre_free</b>, and the callout function pointed to by <b>pcre_callout</b>,
+are shared by all threads.
+</P>
+<P>
+The compiled form of a regular expression is not altered during matching, so
+the same compiled pattern can safely be used by several threads at once.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">CHECKING BUILD-TIME OPTIONS</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_config(int <i>what</i>, void *<i>where</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+The function <b>pcre_config()</b> makes it possible for a PCRE client to
+discover which optional features have been compiled into the PCRE library. The
+<a href="pcrebuild.html"><b>pcrebuild</b></a>
+documentation has more details about these optional features.
+</P>
+<P>
+The first argument for <b>pcre_config()</b> is an integer, specifying which
+information is required; the second argument is a pointer to a variable into
+which the information is placed. The following information is available:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_CONFIG_UTF8
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The output is an integer that is set to one if UTF-8 support is available;
+otherwise it is set to zero.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_CONFIG_NEWLINE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The output is an integer that is set to the value of the code that is used for
+the newline character. It is either linefeed (10) or carriage return (13), and
+should normally be the standard character for your operating system.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_CONFIG_LINK_SIZE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The output is an integer that contains the number of bytes used for internal
+linkage in compiled regular expressions. The value is 2, 3, or 4. Larger values
+allow larger regular expressions to be compiled, at the expense of slower
+matching. The default value of 2 is sufficient for all but the most massive
+patterns, since it allows the compiled pattern to be up to 64K in size.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_CONFIG_POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The output is an integer that contains the threshold above which the POSIX
+interface uses <b>malloc()</b> for output vectors. Further details are given in
+the <b>pcreposix</b> documentation.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_CONFIG_MATCH_LIMIT
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The output is an integer that gives the default limit for the number of
+internal matching function calls in a <b>pcre_exec()</b> execution. Further
+details are given with <b>pcre_exec()</b> below.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">COMPILING A PATTERN</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>pcre *pcre_compile(const char *<i>pattern</i>, int <i>options</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>errptr</i>, int *<i>erroffset</i>,</b>
+<b>const unsigned char *<i>tableptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+The function <b>pcre_compile()</b> is called to compile a pattern into an
+internal form. The pattern is a C string terminated by a binary zero, and
+is passed in the argument <i>pattern</i>. A pointer to a single block of memory
+that is obtained via <b>pcre_malloc</b> is returned. This contains the compiled
+code and related data. The <b>pcre</b> type is defined for the returned block;
+this is a typedef for a structure whose contents are not externally defined. It
+is up to the caller to free the memory when it is no longer required.
+</P>
+<P>
+Although the compiled code of a PCRE regex is relocatable, that is, it does not
+depend on memory location, the complete <b>pcre</b> data block is not
+fully relocatable, because it contains a copy of the <i>tableptr</i> argument,
+which is an address (see below).
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>options</i> argument contains independent bits that affect the
+compilation. It should be zero if no options are required. Some of the options,
+in particular, those that are compatible with Perl, can also be set and unset
+from within the pattern (see the detailed description of regular expressions
+in the <b>pcrepattern</b> documentation). For these options, the contents of the
+<i>options</i> argument specifies their initial settings at the start of
+compilation and execution. The PCRE_ANCHORED option can be set at the time of
+matching as well as at compile time.
+</P>
+<P>
+If <i>errptr</i> is NULL, <b>pcre_compile()</b> returns NULL immediately.
+Otherwise, if compilation of a pattern fails, <b>pcre_compile()</b> returns
+NULL, and sets the variable pointed to by <i>errptr</i> to point to a textual
+error message. The offset from the start of the pattern to the character where
+the error was discovered is placed in the variable pointed to by
+<i>erroffset</i>, which must not be NULL. If it is, an immediate error is given.
+</P>
+<P>
+If the final argument, <i>tableptr</i>, is NULL, PCRE uses a default set of
+character tables which are built when it is compiled, using the default C
+locale. Otherwise, <i>tableptr</i> must be the result of a call to
+<b>pcre_maketables()</b>. See the section on locale support below.
+</P>
+<P>
+This code fragment shows a typical straightforward call to <b>pcre_compile()</b>:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ pcre *re;
+ const char *error;
+ int erroffset;
+ re = pcre_compile(
+ "^A.*Z", /* the pattern */
+ 0, /* default options */
+ &error, /* for error message */
+ &erroffset, /* for error offset */
+ NULL); /* use default character tables */
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The following option bits are defined:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ANCHORED
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If this bit is set, the pattern is forced to be "anchored", that is, it is
+constrained to match only at the first matching point in the string which is
+being searched (the "subject string"). This effect can also be achieved by
+appropriate constructs in the pattern itself, which is the only way to do it in
+Perl.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_CASELESS
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If this bit is set, letters in the pattern match both upper and lower case
+letters. It is equivalent to Perl's /i option, and it can be changed within a
+pattern by a (?i) option setting.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If this bit is set, a dollar metacharacter in the pattern matches only at the
+end of the subject string. Without this option, a dollar also matches
+immediately before the final character if it is a newline (but not before any
+other newlines). The PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option is ignored if PCRE_MULTILINE is
+set. There is no equivalent to this option in Perl, and no way to set it within
+a pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_DOTALL
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If this bit is set, a dot metacharater in the pattern matches all characters,
+including newlines. Without it, newlines are excluded. This option is
+equivalent to Perl's /s option, and it can be changed within a pattern by a
+(?s) option setting. A negative class such as [^a] always matches a newline
+character, independent of the setting of this option.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_EXTENDED
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If this bit is set, whitespace data characters in the pattern are totally
+ignored except when escaped or inside a character class. Whitespace does not
+include the VT character (code 11). In addition, characters between an
+unescaped # outside a character class and the next newline character,
+inclusive, are also ignored. This is equivalent to Perl's /x option, and it can
+be changed within a pattern by a (?x) option setting.
+</P>
+<P>
+This option makes it possible to include comments inside complicated patterns.
+Note, however, that this applies only to data characters. Whitespace characters
+may never appear within special character sequences in a pattern, for example
+within the sequence (?( which introduces a conditional subpattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_EXTRA
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This option was invented in order to turn on additional functionality of PCRE
+that is incompatible with Perl, but it is currently of very little use. When
+set, any backslash in a pattern that is followed by a letter that has no
+special meaning causes an error, thus reserving these combinations for future
+expansion. By default, as in Perl, a backslash followed by a letter with no
+special meaning is treated as a literal. There are at present no other features
+controlled by this option. It can also be set by a (?X) option setting within a
+pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_MULTILINE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+By default, PCRE treats the subject string as consisting of a single "line" of
+characters (even if it actually contains several newlines). The "start of line"
+metacharacter (^) matches only at the start of the string, while the "end of
+line" metacharacter ($) matches only at the end of the string, or before a
+terminating newline (unless PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY is set). This is the same as
+Perl.
+</P>
+<P>
+When PCRE_MULTILINE it is set, the "start of line" and "end of line" constructs
+match immediately following or immediately before any newline in the subject
+string, respectively, as well as at the very start and end. This is equivalent
+to Perl's /m option, and it can be changed within a pattern by a (?m) option
+setting. If there are no "\n" characters in a subject string, or no
+occurrences of ^ or $ in a pattern, setting PCRE_MULTILINE has no effect.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If this option is set, it disables the use of numbered capturing parentheses in
+the pattern. Any opening parenthesis that is not followed by ? behaves as if it
+were followed by ?: but named parentheses can still be used for capturing (and
+they acquire numbers in the usual way). There is no equivalent of this option
+in Perl.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_UNGREEDY
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This option inverts the "greediness" of the quantifiers so that they are not
+greedy by default, but become greedy if followed by "?". It is not compatible
+with Perl. It can also be set by a (?U) option setting within the pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_UTF8
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This option causes PCRE to regard both the pattern and the subject as strings
+of UTF-8 characters instead of single-byte character strings. However, it is
+available only if PCRE has been built to include UTF-8 support. If not, the use
+of this option provokes an error. Details of how this option changes the
+behaviour of PCRE are given in the
+<a href="pcre.html#utf8support">section on UTF-8 support</a>
+in the main
+<a href="pcre.html"><b>pcre</b></a>
+page.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">STUDYING A PATTERN</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>pcre_extra *pcre_study(const pcre *<i>code</i>, int <i>options</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>errptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+When a pattern is going to be used several times, it is worth spending more
+time analyzing it in order to speed up the time taken for matching. The
+function <b>pcre_study()</b> takes a pointer to a compiled pattern as its first
+argument. If studing the pattern produces additional information that will help
+speed up matching, <b>pcre_study()</b> returns a pointer to a <b>pcre_extra</b>
+block, in which the <i>study_data</i> field points to the results of the study.
+</P>
+<P>
+The returned value from a <b>pcre_study()</b> can be passed directly to
+<b>pcre_exec()</b>. However, the <b>pcre_extra</b> block also contains other
+fields that can be set by the caller before the block is passed; these are
+described below. If studying the pattern does not produce any additional
+information, <b>pcre_study()</b> returns NULL. In that circumstance, if the
+calling program wants to pass some of the other fields to <b>pcre_exec()</b>, it
+must set up its own <b>pcre_extra</b> block.
+</P>
+<P>
+The second argument contains option bits. At present, no options are defined
+for <b>pcre_study()</b>, and this argument should always be zero.
+</P>
+<P>
+The third argument for <b>pcre_study()</b> is a pointer for an error message. If
+studying succeeds (even if no data is returned), the variable it points to is
+set to NULL. Otherwise it points to a textual error message. You should
+therefore test the error pointer for NULL after calling <b>pcre_study()</b>, to
+be sure that it has run successfully.
+</P>
+<P>
+This is a typical call to <b>pcre_study</b>():
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ pcre_extra *pe;
+ pe = pcre_study(
+ re, /* result of pcre_compile() */
+ 0, /* no options exist */
+ &error); /* set to NULL or points to a message */
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+At present, studying a pattern is useful only for non-anchored patterns that do
+not have a single fixed starting character. A bitmap of possible starting
+characters is created.
+</P>
+<a name="localesupport"></a><br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">LOCALE SUPPORT</a><br>
+<P>
+PCRE handles caseless matching, and determines whether characters are letters,
+digits, or whatever, by reference to a set of tables. When running in UTF-8
+mode, this applies only to characters with codes less than 256. The library
+contains a default set of tables that is created in the default C locale when
+PCRE is compiled. This is used when the final argument of <b>pcre_compile()</b>
+is NULL, and is sufficient for many applications.
+</P>
+<P>
+An alternative set of tables can, however, be supplied. Such tables are built
+by calling the <b>pcre_maketables()</b> function, which has no arguments, in the
+relevant locale. The result can then be passed to <b>pcre_compile()</b> as often
+as necessary. For example, to build and use tables that are appropriate for the
+French locale (where accented characters with codes greater than 128 are
+treated as letters), the following code could be used:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "fr");
+ tables = pcre_maketables();
+ re = pcre_compile(..., tables);
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The tables are built in memory that is obtained via <b>pcre_malloc</b>. The
+pointer that is passed to <b>pcre_compile</b> is saved with the compiled
+pattern, and the same tables are used via this pointer by <b>pcre_study()</b>
+and <b>pcre_exec()</b>. Thus, for any single pattern, compilation, studying and
+matching all happen in the same locale, but different patterns can be compiled
+in different locales. It is the caller's responsibility to ensure that the
+memory containing the tables remains available for as long as it is needed.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">INFORMATION ABOUT A PATTERN</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_fullinfo(const pcre *<i>code</i>, const pcre_extra *<i>extra</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>what</i>, void *<i>where</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> function returns information about a compiled
+pattern. It replaces the obsolete <b>pcre_info()</b> function, which is
+nevertheless retained for backwards compability (and is documented below).
+</P>
+<P>
+The first argument for <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> is a pointer to the compiled
+pattern. The second argument is the result of <b>pcre_study()</b>, or NULL if
+the pattern was not studied. The third argument specifies which piece of
+information is required, and the fourth argument is a pointer to a variable
+to receive the data. The yield of the function is zero for success, or one of
+the following negative numbers:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NULL the argument <i>code</i> was NULL
+ the argument <i>where</i> was NULL
+ PCRE_ERROR_BADMAGIC the "magic number" was not found
+ PCRE_ERROR_BADOPTION the value of <i>what</i> was invalid
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Here is a typical call of <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b>, to obtain the length of the
+compiled pattern:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ int rc;
+ unsigned long int length;
+ rc = pcre_fullinfo(
+ re, /* result of pcre_compile() */
+ pe, /* result of pcre_study(), or NULL */
+ PCRE_INFO_SIZE, /* what is required */
+ &length); /* where to put the data */
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The possible values for the third argument are defined in <b>pcre.h</b>, and are
+as follows:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_BACKREFMAX
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Return the number of the highest back reference in the pattern. The fourth
+argument should point to an <b>int</b> variable. Zero is returned if there are
+no back references.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_CAPTURECOUNT
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Return the number of capturing subpatterns in the pattern. The fourth argument
+should point to an \fbint\fR variable.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_FIRSTBYTE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Return information about the first byte of any matched string, for a
+non-anchored pattern. (This option used to be called PCRE_INFO_FIRSTCHAR; the
+old name is still recognized for backwards compatibility.)
+</P>
+<P>
+If there is a fixed first byte, e.g. from a pattern such as (cat|cow|coyote),
+it is returned in the integer pointed to by <i>where</i>. Otherwise, if either
+</P>
+<P>
+(a) the pattern was compiled with the PCRE_MULTILINE option, and every branch
+starts with "^", or
+</P>
+<P>
+(b) every branch of the pattern starts with ".*" and PCRE_DOTALL is not set
+(if it were set, the pattern would be anchored),
+</P>
+<P>
+-1 is returned, indicating that the pattern matches only at the start of a
+subject string or after any newline within the string. Otherwise -2 is
+returned. For anchored patterns, -2 is returned.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_FIRSTTABLE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If the pattern was studied, and this resulted in the construction of a 256-bit
+table indicating a fixed set of bytes for the first byte in any matching
+string, a pointer to the table is returned. Otherwise NULL is returned. The
+fourth argument should point to an <b>unsigned char *</b> variable.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_LASTLITERAL
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+For a non-anchored pattern, return the value of the rightmost literal byte
+which must exist in any matched string, other than at its start. The fourth
+argument should point to an <b>int</b> variable. If there is no such byte, or if
+the pattern is anchored, -1 is returned. For example, for the pattern
+/a\d+z\d+/ the returned value is 'z'.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_NAMECOUNT
+ PCRE_INFO_NAMEENTRYSIZE
+ PCRE_INFO_NAMETABLE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE supports the use of named as well as numbered capturing parentheses. The
+names are just an additional way of identifying the parentheses, which still
+acquire a number. A caller that wants to extract data from a named subpattern
+must convert the name to a number in order to access the correct pointers in
+the output vector (described with <b>pcre_exec()</b> below). In order to do
+this, it must first use these three values to obtain the name-to-number mapping
+table for the pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+The map consists of a number of fixed-size entries. PCRE_INFO_NAMECOUNT gives
+the number of entries, and PCRE_INFO_NAMEENTRYSIZE gives the size of each
+entry; both of these return an <b>int</b> value. The entry size depends on the
+length of the longest name. PCRE_INFO_NAMETABLE returns a pointer to the first
+entry of the table (a pointer to <b>char</b>). The first two bytes of each entry
+are the number of the capturing parenthesis, most significant byte first. The
+rest of the entry is the corresponding name, zero terminated. The names are in
+alphabetical order. For example, consider the following pattern (assume
+PCRE_EXTENDED is set, so white space - including newlines - is ignored):
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?P&#60;date&#62; (?P&#60;year&#62;(\d\d)?\d\d) -
+ (?P&#60;month&#62;\d\d) - (?P&#60;day&#62;\d\d) )
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+There are four named subpatterns, so the table has four entries, and each entry
+in the table is eight bytes long. The table is as follows, with non-printing
+bytes shows in hex, and undefined bytes shown as ??:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ 00 01 d a t e 00 ??
+ 00 05 d a y 00 ?? ??
+ 00 04 m o n t h 00
+ 00 02 y e a r 00 ??
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+When writing code to extract data from named subpatterns, remember that the
+length of each entry may be different for each compiled pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_OPTIONS
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Return a copy of the options with which the pattern was compiled. The fourth
+argument should point to an <b>unsigned long int</b> variable. These option bits
+are those specified in the call to <b>pcre_compile()</b>, modified by any
+top-level option settings within the pattern itself.
+</P>
+<P>
+A pattern is automatically anchored by PCRE if all of its top-level
+alternatives begin with one of the following:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ^ unless PCRE_MULTILINE is set
+ \A always
+ \G always
+ .* if PCRE_DOTALL is set and there are no back
+ references to the subpattern in which .* appears
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+For such patterns, the PCRE_ANCHORED bit is set in the options returned by
+<b>pcre_fullinfo()</b>.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_SIZE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Return the size of the compiled pattern, that is, the value that was passed as
+the argument to <b>pcre_malloc()</b> when PCRE was getting memory in which to
+place the compiled data. The fourth argument should point to a <b>size_t</b>
+variable.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_INFO_STUDYSIZE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Returns the size of the data block pointed to by the <i>study_data</i> field in
+a <b>pcre_extra</b> block. That is, it is the value that was passed to
+<b>pcre_malloc()</b> when PCRE was getting memory into which to place the data
+created by <b>pcre_study()</b>. The fourth argument should point to a
+<b>size_t</b> variable.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC9" href="#TOC1">OBSOLETE INFO FUNCTION</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_info(const pcre *<i>code</i>, int *<i>optptr</i>, int</b>
+<b>*<i>firstcharptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>pcre_info()</b> function is now obsolete because its interface is too
+restrictive to return all the available data about a compiled pattern. New
+programs should use <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> instead. The yield of
+<b>pcre_info()</b> is the number of capturing subpatterns, or one of the
+following negative numbers:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NULL the argument <i>code</i> was NULL
+ PCRE_ERROR_BADMAGIC the "magic number" was not found
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If the <i>optptr</i> argument is not NULL, a copy of the options with which the
+pattern was compiled is placed in the integer it points to (see
+PCRE_INFO_OPTIONS above).
+</P>
+<P>
+If the pattern is not anchored and the <i>firstcharptr</i> argument is not NULL,
+it is used to pass back information about the first character of any matched
+string (see PCRE_INFO_FIRSTBYTE above).
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC10" href="#TOC1">MATCHING A PATTERN</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_exec(const pcre *<i>code</i>, const pcre_extra *<i>extra</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int <i>length</i>, int <i>startoffset</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>options</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>, int <i>ovecsize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+The function <b>pcre_exec()</b> is called to match a subject string against a
+pre-compiled pattern, which is passed in the <i>code</i> argument. If the
+pattern has been studied, the result of the study should be passed in the
+<i>extra</i> argument.
+</P>
+<P>
+Here is an example of a simple call to <b>pcre_exec()</b>:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ int rc;
+ int ovector[30];
+ rc = pcre_exec(
+ re, /* result of pcre_compile() */
+ NULL, /* we didn't study the pattern */
+ "some string", /* the subject string */
+ 11, /* the length of the subject string */
+ 0, /* start at offset 0 in the subject */
+ 0, /* default options */
+ ovector, /* vector for substring information */
+ 30); /* number of elements in the vector */
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If the <i>extra</i> argument is not NULL, it must point to a <b>pcre_extra</b>
+data block. The <b>pcre_study()</b> function returns such a block (when it
+doesn't return NULL), but you can also create one for yourself, and pass
+additional information in it. The fields in the block are as follows:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ unsigned long int <i>flags</i>;
+ void *<i>study_data</i>;
+ unsigned long int <i>match_limit</i>;
+ void *<i>callout_data</i>;
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>flags</i> field is a bitmap that specifies which of the other fields
+are set. The flag bits are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_EXTRA_STUDY_DATA
+ PCRE_EXTRA_MATCH_LIMIT
+ PCRE_EXTRA_CALLOUT_DATA
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Other flag bits should be set to zero. The <i>study_data</i> field is set in the
+<b>pcre_extra</b> block that is returned by <b>pcre_study()</b>, together with
+the appropriate flag bit. You should not set this yourself, but you can add to
+the block by setting the other fields.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>match_limit</i> field provides a means of preventing PCRE from using up a
+vast amount of resources when running patterns that are not going to match,
+but which have a very large number of possibilities in their search trees. The
+classic example is the use of nested unlimited repeats. Internally, PCRE uses a
+function called <b>match()</b> which it calls repeatedly (sometimes
+recursively). The limit is imposed on the number of times this function is
+called during a match, which has the effect of limiting the amount of recursion
+and backtracking that can take place. For patterns that are not anchored, the
+count starts from zero for each position in the subject string.
+</P>
+<P>
+The default limit for the library can be set when PCRE is built; the default
+default is 10 million, which handles all but the most extreme cases. You can
+reduce the default by suppling <b>pcre_exec()</b> with a \fRpcre_extra\fR block
+in which <i>match_limit</i> is set to a smaller value, and
+PCRE_EXTRA_MATCH_LIMIT is set in the <i>flags</i> field. If the limit is
+exceeded, <b>pcre_exec()</b> returns PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>pcre_callout</i> field is used in conjunction with the "callout" feature,
+which is described in the <b>pcrecallout</b> documentation.
+</P>
+<P>
+The PCRE_ANCHORED option can be passed in the <i>options</i> argument, whose
+unused bits must be zero. This limits <b>pcre_exec()</b> to matching at the
+first matching position. However, if a pattern was compiled with PCRE_ANCHORED,
+or turned out to be anchored by virtue of its contents, it cannot be made
+unachored at matching time.
+</P>
+<P>
+There are also three further options that can be set only at matching time:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_NOTBOL
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The first character of the string is not the beginning of a line, so the
+circumflex metacharacter should not match before it. Setting this without
+PCRE_MULTILINE (at compile time) causes circumflex never to match.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_NOTEOL
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The end of the string is not the end of a line, so the dollar metacharacter
+should not match it nor (except in multiline mode) a newline immediately before
+it. Setting this without PCRE_MULTILINE (at compile time) causes dollar never
+to match.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_NOTEMPTY
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+An empty string is not considered to be a valid match if this option is set. If
+there are alternatives in the pattern, they are tried. If all the alternatives
+match the empty string, the entire match fails. For example, if the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ a?b?
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+is applied to a string not beginning with "a" or "b", it matches the empty
+string at the start of the subject. With PCRE_NOTEMPTY set, this match is not
+valid, so PCRE searches further into the string for occurrences of "a" or "b".
+</P>
+<P>
+Perl has no direct equivalent of PCRE_NOTEMPTY, but it does make a special case
+of a pattern match of the empty string within its <b>split()</b> function, and
+when using the /g modifier. It is possible to emulate Perl's behaviour after
+matching a null string by first trying the match again at the same offset with
+PCRE_NOTEMPTY set, and then if that fails by advancing the starting offset (see
+below) and trying an ordinary match again.
+</P>
+<P>
+The subject string is passed to <b>pcre_exec()</b> as a pointer in
+<i>subject</i>, a length in <i>length</i>, and a starting offset in
+<i>startoffset</i>. Unlike the pattern string, the subject may contain binary
+zero bytes. When the starting offset is zero, the search for a match starts at
+the beginning of the subject, and this is by far the most common case.
+</P>
+<P>
+If the pattern was compiled with the PCRE_UTF8 option, the subject must be a
+sequence of bytes that is a valid UTF-8 string. If an invalid UTF-8 string is
+passed, PCRE's behaviour is not defined.
+</P>
+<P>
+A non-zero starting offset is useful when searching for another match in the
+same subject by calling <b>pcre_exec()</b> again after a previous success.
+Setting <i>startoffset</i> differs from just passing over a shortened string and
+setting PCRE_NOTBOL in the case of a pattern that begins with any kind of
+lookbehind. For example, consider the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \Biss\B
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+which finds occurrences of "iss" in the middle of words. (\B matches only if
+the current position in the subject is not a word boundary.) When applied to
+the string "Mississipi" the first call to <b>pcre_exec()</b> finds the first
+occurrence. If <b>pcre_exec()</b> is called again with just the remainder of the
+subject, namely "issipi", it does not match, because \B is always false at the
+start of the subject, which is deemed to be a word boundary. However, if
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> is passed the entire string again, but with <i>startoffset</i>
+set to 4, it finds the second occurrence of "iss" because it is able to look
+behind the starting point to discover that it is preceded by a letter.
+</P>
+<P>
+If a non-zero starting offset is passed when the pattern is anchored, one
+attempt to match at the given offset is tried. This can only succeed if the
+pattern does not require the match to be at the start of the subject.
+</P>
+<P>
+In general, a pattern matches a certain portion of the subject, and in
+addition, further substrings from the subject may be picked out by parts of the
+pattern. Following the usage in Jeffrey Friedl's book, this is called
+"capturing" in what follows, and the phrase "capturing subpattern" is used for
+a fragment of a pattern that picks out a substring. PCRE supports several other
+kinds of parenthesized subpattern that do not cause substrings to be captured.
+</P>
+<P>
+Captured substrings are returned to the caller via a vector of integer offsets
+whose address is passed in <i>ovector</i>. The number of elements in the vector
+is passed in <i>ovecsize</i>. The first two-thirds of the vector is used to pass
+back captured substrings, each substring using a pair of integers. The
+remaining third of the vector is used as workspace by <b>pcre_exec()</b> while
+matching capturing subpatterns, and is not available for passing back
+information. The length passed in <i>ovecsize</i> should always be a multiple of
+three. If it is not, it is rounded down.
+</P>
+<P>
+When a match has been successful, information about captured substrings is
+returned in pairs of integers, starting at the beginning of <i>ovector</i>, and
+continuing up to two-thirds of its length at the most. The first element of a
+pair is set to the offset of the first character in a substring, and the second
+is set to the offset of the first character after the end of a substring. The
+first pair, <i>ovector[0]</i> and <i>ovector[1]</i>, identify the portion of the
+subject string matched by the entire pattern. The next pair is used for the
+first capturing subpattern, and so on. The value returned by <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+is the number of pairs that have been set. If there are no capturing
+subpatterns, the return value from a successful match is 1, indicating that
+just the first pair of offsets has been set.
+</P>
+<P>
+Some convenience functions are provided for extracting the captured substrings
+as separate strings. These are described in the following section.
+</P>
+<P>
+It is possible for an capturing subpattern number <i>n+1</i> to match some
+part of the subject when subpattern <i>n</i> has not been used at all. For
+example, if the string "abc" is matched against the pattern (a|(z))(bc)
+subpatterns 1 and 3 are matched, but 2 is not. When this happens, both offset
+values corresponding to the unused subpattern are set to -1.
+</P>
+<P>
+If a capturing subpattern is matched repeatedly, it is the last portion of the
+string that it matched that gets returned.
+</P>
+<P>
+If the vector is too small to hold all the captured substrings, it is used as
+far as possible (up to two-thirds of its length), and the function returns a
+value of zero. In particular, if the substring offsets are not of interest,
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> may be called with <i>ovector</i> passed as NULL and
+<i>ovecsize</i> as zero. However, if the pattern contains back references and
+the <i>ovector</i> isn't big enough to remember the related substrings, PCRE has
+to get additional memory for use during matching. Thus it is usually advisable
+to supply an <i>ovector</i>.
+</P>
+<P>
+Note that <b>pcre_info()</b> can be used to find out how many capturing
+subpatterns there are in a compiled pattern. The smallest size for
+<i>ovector</i> that will allow for <i>n</i> captured substrings, in addition to
+the offsets of the substring matched by the whole pattern, is (<i>n</i>+1)*3.
+</P>
+<P>
+If <b>pcre_exec()</b> fails, it returns a negative number. The following are
+defined in the header file:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH (-1)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The subject string did not match the pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NULL (-2)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Either <i>code</i> or <i>subject</i> was passed as NULL, or <i>ovector</i> was
+NULL and <i>ovecsize</i> was not zero.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_BADOPTION (-3)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+An unrecognized bit was set in the <i>options</i> argument.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_BADMAGIC (-4)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE stores a 4-byte "magic number" at the start of the compiled code, to catch
+the case when it is passed a junk pointer. This is the error it gives when the
+magic number isn't present.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_UNKNOWN_NODE (-5)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+While running the pattern match, an unknown item was encountered in the
+compiled pattern. This error could be caused by a bug in PCRE or by overwriting
+of the compiled pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY (-6)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If a pattern contains back references, but the <i>ovector</i> that is passed to
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> is not big enough to remember the referenced substrings, PCRE
+gets a block of memory at the start of matching to use for this purpose. If the
+call via <b>pcre_malloc()</b> fails, this error is given. The memory is freed at
+the end of matching.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING (-7)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This error is used by the <b>pcre_copy_substring()</b>,
+<b>pcre_get_substring()</b>, and <b>pcre_get_substring_list()</b> functions (see
+below). It is never returned by <b>pcre_exec()</b>.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT (-8)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The recursion and backtracking limit, as specified by the <i>match_limit</i>
+field in a <b>pcre_extra</b> structure (or defaulted) was reached. See the
+description above.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_CALLOUT (-9)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This error is never generated by <b>pcre_exec()</b> itself. It is provided for
+use by callout functions that want to yield a distinctive error code. See the
+<b>pcrecallout</b> documentation for details.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC11" href="#TOC1">EXTRACTING CAPTURED SUBSTRINGS BY NUMBER</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_copy_substring(const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, int <i>stringnumber</i>, char *<i>buffer</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>buffersize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_substring(const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, int <i>stringnumber</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_substring_list(const char *<i>subject</i>,</b>
+<b>int *<i>ovector</i>, int <i>stringcount</i>, const char ***<i>listptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+Captured substrings can be accessed directly by using the offsets returned by
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> in <i>ovector</i>. For convenience, the functions
+<b>pcre_copy_substring()</b>, <b>pcre_get_substring()</b>, and
+<b>pcre_get_substring_list()</b> are provided for extracting captured substrings
+as new, separate, zero-terminated strings. These functions identify substrings
+by number. The next section describes functions for extracting named
+substrings. A substring that contains a binary zero is correctly extracted and
+has a further zero added on the end, but the result is not, of course,
+a C string.
+</P>
+<P>
+The first three arguments are the same for all three of these functions:
+<i>subject</i> is the subject string which has just been successfully matched,
+<i>ovector</i> is a pointer to the vector of integer offsets that was passed to
+<b>pcre_exec()</b>, and <i>stringcount</i> is the number of substrings that were
+captured by the match, including the substring that matched the entire regular
+expression. This is the value returned by <b>pcre_exec</b> if it is greater than
+zero. If <b>pcre_exec()</b> returned zero, indicating that it ran out of space
+in <i>ovector</i>, the value passed as <i>stringcount</i> should be the size of
+the vector divided by three.
+</P>
+<P>
+The functions <b>pcre_copy_substring()</b> and <b>pcre_get_substring()</b>
+extract a single substring, whose number is given as <i>stringnumber</i>. A
+value of zero extracts the substring that matched the entire pattern, while
+higher values extract the captured substrings. For <b>pcre_copy_substring()</b>,
+the string is placed in <i>buffer</i>, whose length is given by
+<i>buffersize</i>, while for <b>pcre_get_substring()</b> a new block of memory is
+obtained via <b>pcre_malloc</b>, and its address is returned via
+<i>stringptr</i>. The yield of the function is the length of the string, not
+including the terminating zero, or one of
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY (-6)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The buffer was too small for <b>pcre_copy_substring()</b>, or the attempt to get
+memory failed for <b>pcre_get_substring()</b>.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING (-7)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+There is no substring whose number is <i>stringnumber</i>.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>pcre_get_substring_list()</b> function extracts all available substrings
+and builds a list of pointers to them. All this is done in a single block of
+memory which is obtained via <b>pcre_malloc</b>. The address of the memory block
+is returned via <i>listptr</i>, which is also the start of the list of string
+pointers. The end of the list is marked by a NULL pointer. The yield of the
+function is zero if all went well, or
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY (-6)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+if the attempt to get the memory block failed.
+</P>
+<P>
+When any of these functions encounter a substring that is unset, which can
+happen when capturing subpattern number <i>n+1</i> matches some part of the
+subject, but subpattern <i>n</i> has not been used at all, they return an empty
+string. This can be distinguished from a genuine zero-length substring by
+inspecting the appropriate offset in <i>ovector</i>, which is negative for unset
+substrings.
+</P>
+<P>
+The two convenience functions <b>pcre_free_substring()</b> and
+<b>pcre_free_substring_list()</b> can be used to free the memory returned by
+a previous call of <b>pcre_get_substring()</b> or
+<b>pcre_get_substring_list()</b>, respectively. They do nothing more than call
+the function pointed to by <b>pcre_free</b>, which of course could be called
+directly from a C program. However, PCRE is used in some situations where it is
+linked via a special interface to another programming language which cannot use
+<b>pcre_free</b> directly; it is for these cases that the functions are
+provided.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC12" href="#TOC1">EXTRACTING CAPTURED SUBSTRINGS BY NAME</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_copy_named_substring(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, const char *<i>stringname</i>,</b>
+<b>char *<i>buffer</i>, int <i>buffersize</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_stringnumber(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>name</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int pcre_get_named_substring(const pcre *<i>code</i>,</b>
+<b>const char *<i>subject</i>, int *<i>ovector</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>stringcount</i>, const char *<i>stringname</i>,</b>
+<b>const char **<i>stringptr</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+To extract a substring by name, you first have to find associated number. This
+can be done by calling <b>pcre_get_stringnumber()</b>. The first argument is the
+compiled pattern, and the second is the name. For example, for this pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ab(?&#60;xxx&#62;\d+)...
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+the number of the subpattern called "xxx" is 1. Given the number, you can then
+extract the substring directly, or use one of the functions described in the
+previous section. For convenience, there are also two functions that do the
+whole job.
+</P>
+<P>
+Most of the arguments of <i>pcre_copy_named_substring()</i> and
+<i>pcre_get_named_substring()</i> are the same as those for the functions that
+extract by number, and so are not re-described here. There are just two
+differences.
+</P>
+<P>
+First, instead of a substring number, a substring name is given. Second, there
+is an extra argument, given at the start, which is a pointer to the compiled
+pattern. This is needed in order to gain access to the name-to-number
+translation table.
+</P>
+<P>
+These functions call <b>pcre_get_stringnumber()</b>, and if it succeeds, they
+then call <i>pcre_copy_substring()</i> or <i>pcre_get_substring()</i>, as
+appropriate.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 03 February 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcrebuild.html b/doc/html/pcrebuild.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ff3e08e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcrebuild.html
@@ -0,0 +1,148 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcrebuild specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">PCRE BUILD-TIME OPTIONS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">UTF-8 SUPPORT</a>
+<li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">CODE VALUE OF NEWLINE</a>
+<li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">BUILDING SHARED AND STATIC LIBRARIES</a>
+<li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">POSIX MALLOC USAGE</a>
+<li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">LIMITING PCRE RESOURCE USAGE</a>
+<li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">HANDLING VERY LARGE PATTERNS</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">PCRE BUILD-TIME OPTIONS</a><br>
+<P>
+This document describes the optional features of PCRE that can be selected when
+the library is compiled. They are all selected, or deselected, by providing
+options to the <b>configure</b> script which is run before the <b>make</b>
+command. The complete list of options for <b>configure</b> (which includes the
+standard ones such as the selection of the installation directory) can be
+obtained by running
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ./configure --help
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The following sections describe certain options whose names begin with --enable
+or --disable. These settings specify changes to the defaults for the
+<b>configure</b> command. Because of the way that <b>configure</b> works,
+--enable and --disable always come in pairs, so the complementary option always
+exists as well, but as it specifies the default, it is not described.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">UTF-8 SUPPORT</a><br>
+<P>
+To build PCRE with support for UTF-8 character strings, add
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ --enable-utf8
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+to the <b>configure</b> command. Of itself, this does not make PCRE treat
+strings as UTF-8. As well as compiling PCRE with this option, you also have
+have to set the PCRE_UTF8 option when you call the <b>pcre_compile()</b>
+function.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">CODE VALUE OF NEWLINE</a><br>
+<P>
+By default, PCRE treats character 10 (linefeed) as the newline character. This
+is the normal newline character on Unix-like systems. You can compile PCRE to
+use character 13 (carriage return) instead by adding
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ --enable-newline-is-cr
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+to the <b>configure</b> command. For completeness there is also a
+--enable-newline-is-lf option, which explicitly specifies linefeed as the
+newline character.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">BUILDING SHARED AND STATIC LIBRARIES</a><br>
+<P>
+The PCRE building process uses <b>libtool</b> to build both shared and static
+Unix libraries by default. You can suppress one of these by adding one of
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ --disable-shared
+ --disable-static
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+to the <b>configure</b> command, as required.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">POSIX MALLOC USAGE</a><br>
+<P>
+When PCRE is called through the POSIX interface (see the <b>pcreposix</b>
+documentation), additional working storage is required for holding the pointers
+to capturing substrings because PCRE requires three integers per substring,
+whereas the POSIX interface provides only two. If the number of expected
+substrings is small, the wrapper function uses space on the stack, because this
+is faster than using <b>malloc()</b> for each call. The default threshold above
+which the stack is no longer used is 10; it can be changed by adding a setting
+such as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ --with-posix-malloc-threshold=20
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+to the <b>configure</b> command.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">LIMITING PCRE RESOURCE USAGE</a><br>
+<P>
+Internally, PCRE has a function called <b>match()</b> which it calls repeatedly
+(possibly recursively) when performing a matching operation. By limiting the
+number of times this function may be called, a limit can be placed on the
+resources used by a single call to <b>pcre_exec()</b>. The limit can be changed
+at run time, as described in the <b>pcreapi</b> documentation. The default is 10
+million, but this can be changed by adding a setting such as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ --with-match-limit=500000
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+to the <b>configure</b> command.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">HANDLING VERY LARGE PATTERNS</a><br>
+<P>
+Within a compiled pattern, offset values are used to point from one part to
+another (for example, from an opening parenthesis to an alternation
+metacharacter). By default two-byte values are used for these offsets, leading
+to a maximum size for a compiled pattern of around 64K. This is sufficient to
+handle all but the most gigantic patterns. Nevertheless, some people do want to
+process enormous patterns, so it is possible to compile PCRE to use three-byte
+or four-byte offsets by adding a setting such as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ --with-link-size=3
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+to the <b>configure</b> command. The value given must be 2, 3, or 4. Using
+longer offsets slows down the operation of PCRE because it has to load
+additional bytes when handling them.
+</P>
+<P>
+If you build PCRE with an increased link size, test 2 (and test 5 if you are
+using UTF-8) will fail. Part of the output of these tests is a representation
+of the compiled pattern, and this changes with the link size.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 21 January 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcrecallout.html b/doc/html/pcrecallout.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5516c99
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcrecallout.html
@@ -0,0 +1,116 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcrecallout specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">PCRE CALLOUTS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">RETURN VALUES</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">PCRE CALLOUTS</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>int (*pcre_callout)(pcre_callout_block *);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE provides a feature called "callout", which is a means of temporarily
+passing control to the caller of PCRE in the middle of pattern matching. The
+caller of PCRE provides an external function by putting its entry point in the
+global variable <i>pcre_callout</i>. By default, this variable contains NULL,
+which disables all calling out.
+</P>
+<P>
+Within a regular expression, (?C) indicates the points at which the external
+function is to be called. Different callout points can be identified by putting
+a number less than 256 after the letter C. The default value is zero.
+For example, this pattern has two callout points:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?C1)\dabc(?C2)def
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+During matching, when PCRE reaches a callout point (and <i>pcre_callout</i> is
+set), the external function is called. Its only argument is a pointer to a
+<b>pcre_callout</b> block. This contains the following variables:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ int <i>version</i>;
+ int <i>callout_number</i>;
+ int *<i>offset_vector</i>;
+ const char *<i>subject</i>;
+ int <i>subject_length</i>;
+ int <i>start_match</i>;
+ int <i>current_position</i>;
+ int <i>capture_top</i>;
+ int <i>capture_last</i>;
+ void *<i>callout_data</i>;
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>version</i> field is an integer containing the version number of the
+block format. The current version is zero. The version number may change in
+future if additional fields are added, but the intention is never to remove any
+of the existing fields.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>callout_number</i> field contains the number of the callout, as compiled
+into the pattern (that is, the number after ?C).
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>offset_vector</i> field is a pointer to the vector of offsets that was
+passed by the caller to <b>pcre_exec()</b>. The contents can be inspected in
+order to extract substrings that have been matched so far, in the same way as
+for extracting substrings after a match has completed.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>subject</i> and <i>subject_length</i> fields contain copies the values
+that were passed to <b>pcre_exec()</b>.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>start_match</i> field contains the offset within the subject at which the
+current match attempt started. If the pattern is not anchored, the callout
+function may be called several times for different starting points.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>current_position</i> field contains the offset within the subject of the
+current match pointer.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>capture_top</i> field contains the number of the highest captured
+substring so far.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>capture_last</i> field contains the number of the most recently captured
+substring.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <i>callout_data</i> field contains a value that is passed to
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> by the caller specifically so that it can be passed back in
+callouts. It is passed in the <i>pcre_callout</i> field of the <b>pcre_extra</b>
+data structure. If no such data was passed, the value of <i>callout_data</i> in
+a <b>pcre_callout</b> block is NULL. There is a description of the
+<b>pcre_extra</b> structure in the <b>pcreapi</b> documentation.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">RETURN VALUES</a><br>
+<P>
+The callout function returns an integer. If the value is zero, matching
+proceeds as normal. If the value is greater than zero, matching fails at the
+current point, but backtracking to test other possibilities goes ahead, just as
+if a lookahead assertion had failed. If the value is less than zero, the match
+is abandoned, and <b>pcre_exec()</b> returns the value.
+</P>
+<P>
+Negative values should normally be chosen from the set of PCRE_ERROR_xxx
+values. In particular, PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH forces a standard "no match" failure.
+The error number PCRE_ERROR_CALLOUT is reserved for use by callout functions;
+it will never be used by PCRE itself.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 21 January 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcrecompat.html b/doc/html/pcrecompat.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ecd4565
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcrecompat.html
@@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcrecompat specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">DIFFERENCES FROM PERL</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">DIFFERENCES FROM PERL</a><br>
+<P>
+This document describes the differences in the ways that PCRE and Perl handle
+regular expressions. The differences described here are with respect to Perl
+5.8.
+</P>
+<P>
+1. PCRE does not allow repeat quantifiers on lookahead assertions. Perl permits
+them, but they do not mean what you might think. For example, (?!a){3} does
+not assert that the next three characters are not "a". It just asserts that the
+next character is not "a" three times.
+</P>
+<P>
+2. Capturing subpatterns that occur inside negative lookahead assertions are
+counted, but their entries in the offsets vector are never set. Perl sets its
+numerical variables from any such patterns that are matched before the
+assertion fails to match something (thereby succeeding), but only if the
+negative lookahead assertion contains just one branch.
+</P>
+<P>
+3. Though binary zero characters are supported in the subject string, they are
+not allowed in a pattern string because it is passed as a normal C string,
+terminated by zero. The escape sequence "\0" can be used in the pattern to
+represent a binary zero.
+</P>
+<P>
+4. The following Perl escape sequences are not supported: \l, \u, \L,
+\U, \P, \p, \N, and \X. In fact these are implemented by Perl's general
+string-handling and are not part of its pattern matching engine. If any of
+these are encountered by PCRE, an error is generated.
+</P>
+<P>
+5. PCRE does support the \Q...\E escape for quoting substrings. Characters in
+between are treated as literals. This is slightly different from Perl in that $
+and @ are also handled as literals inside the quotes. In Perl, they cause
+variable interpolation (but of course PCRE does not have variables). Note the
+following examples:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ Pattern PCRE matches Perl matches
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \Qabc$xyz\E abc$xyz abc followed by the
+ contents of $xyz
+ \Qabc\$xyz\E abc\$xyz abc\$xyz
+ \Qabc\E\$\Qxyz\E abc$xyz abc$xyz
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+In PCRE, the \Q...\E mechanism is not recognized inside a character class.
+</P>
+<P>
+8. Fairly obviously, PCRE does not support the (?{code}) and (?p{code})
+constructions. However, there is some experimental support for recursive
+patterns using the non-Perl items (?R), (?number) and (?P&#62;name). Also, the PCRE
+"callout" feature allows an external function to be called during pattern
+matching.
+</P>
+<P>
+9. There are some differences that are concerned with the settings of captured
+strings when part of a pattern is repeated. For example, matching "aba" against
+the pattern /^(a(b)?)+$/ in Perl leaves $2 unset, but in PCRE it is set to "b".
+</P>
+<P>
+10. PCRE provides some extensions to the Perl regular expression facilities:
+</P>
+<P>
+(a) Although lookbehind assertions must match fixed length strings, each
+alternative branch of a lookbehind assertion can match a different length of
+string. Perl requires them all to have the same length.
+</P>
+<P>
+(b) If PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY is set and PCRE_MULTILINE is not set, the $
+meta-character matches only at the very end of the string.
+</P>
+<P>
+&copy; If PCRE_EXTRA is set, a backslash followed by a letter with no special
+meaning is faulted.
+</P>
+<P>
+(d) If PCRE_UNGREEDY is set, the greediness of the repetition quantifiers is
+inverted, that is, by default they are not greedy, but if followed by a
+question mark they are.
+</P>
+<P>
+(e) PCRE_ANCHORED can be used to force a pattern to be tried only at the first
+matching position in the subject string.
+</P>
+<P>
+(f) The PCRE_NOTBOL, PCRE_NOTEOL, PCRE_NOTEMPTY, and PCRE_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE
+options for <b>pcre_exec()</b> have no Perl equivalents.
+</P>
+<P>
+(g) The (?R), (?number), and (?P&#62;name) constructs allows for recursive pattern
+matching (Perl can do this using the (?p{code}) construct, which PCRE cannot
+support.)
+</P>
+<P>
+(h) PCRE supports named capturing substrings, using the Python syntax.
+</P>
+<P>
+(i) PCRE supports the possessive quantifier "++" syntax, taken from Sun's Java
+package.
+</P>
+<P>
+(j) The (R) condition, for testing recursion, is a PCRE extension.
+</P>
+<P>
+(k) The callout facility is PCRE-specific.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 03 February 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcregrep.html b/doc/html/pcregrep.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a76cac2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcregrep.html
@@ -0,0 +1,153 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcregrep specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">SYNOPSIS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">DESCRIPTION</a>
+<li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">OPTIONS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">LONG OPTIONS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">DIAGNOSTICS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">AUTHOR</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">SYNOPSIS</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>pcregrep [-Vcfhilnrsuvx] [long options] [pattern] [file1 file2 ...]</b>
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>pcregrep</b> searches files for character patterns, in the same way as other
+grep commands do, but it uses the PCRE regular expression library to support
+patterns that are compatible with the regular expressions of Perl 5. See
+<a href="pcrepattern.html"><b>pcrepattern</b></a>
+for a full description of syntax and semantics of the regular expressions that
+PCRE supports.
+</P>
+<P>
+A pattern must be specified on the command line unless the <b>-f</b> option is
+used (see below).
+</P>
+<P>
+If no files are specified, <b>pcregrep</b> reads the standard input. By default,
+each line that matches the pattern is copied to the standard output, and if
+there is more than one file, the file name is printed before each line of
+output. However, there are options that can change how <b>pcregrep</b> behaves.
+</P>
+<P>
+Lines are limited to BUFSIZ characters. BUFSIZ is defined in <b>&#60;stdio.h&#62;</b>.
+The newline character is removed from the end of each line before it is matched
+against the pattern.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">OPTIONS</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>-V</b>
+Write the version number of the PCRE library being used to the standard error
+stream.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-c</b>
+Do not print individual lines; instead just print a count of the number of
+lines that would otherwise have been printed. If several files are given, a
+count is printed for each of them.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-f</b><i>filename</i>
+Read a number of patterns from the file, one per line, and match all of them
+against each line of input. A line is output if any of the patterns match it.
+When <b>-f</b> is used, no pattern is taken from the command line; all arguments
+are treated as file names. There is a maximum of 100 patterns. Trailing white
+space is removed, and blank lines are ignored. An empty file contains no
+patterns and therefore matches nothing.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-h</b>
+Suppress printing of filenames when searching multiple files.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-i</b>
+Ignore upper/lower case distinctions during comparisons.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-l</b>
+Instead of printing lines from the files, just print the names of the files
+containing lines that would have been printed. Each file name is printed
+once, on a separate line.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-n</b>
+Precede each line by its line number in the file.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-r</b>
+If any file is a directory, recursively scan the files it contains. Without
+<b>-r</b> a directory is scanned as a normal file.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-s</b>
+Work silently, that is, display nothing except error messages.
+The exit status indicates whether any matches were found.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-u</b>
+Operate in UTF-8 mode. This option is available only if PCRE has been compiled
+with UTF-8 support. Both the pattern and each subject line are assumed to be
+valid strings of UTF-8 characters.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-v</b>
+Invert the sense of the match, so that lines which do <i>not</i> match the
+pattern are now the ones that are found.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-x</b>
+Force the pattern to be anchored (it must start matching at the beginning of
+the line) and in addition, require it to match the entire line. This is
+equivalent to having ^ and $ characters at the start and end of each
+alternative branch in the regular expression.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">LONG OPTIONS</a><br>
+<P>
+Long forms of all the options are available, as in GNU grep. They are shown in
+the following table:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ -c --count
+ -h --no-filename
+ -i --ignore-case
+ -l --files-with-matches
+ -n --line-number
+ -r --recursive
+ -s --no-messages
+ -u --utf-8
+ -V --version
+ -v --invert-match
+ -x --line-regex
+ -x --line-regexp
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+In addition, --file=<i>filename</i> is equivalent to -f<i>filename</i>, and
+--help shows the list of options and then exits.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">DIAGNOSTICS</a><br>
+<P>
+Exit status is 0 if any matches were found, 1 if no matches were found, and 2
+for syntax errors or inacessible files (even if matches were found).
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
+<P>
+Philip Hazel &#60;ph10@cam.ac.uk&#62;
+<br>
+University Computing Service
+<br>
+Cambridge CB2 3QG, England.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 03 February 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcrepattern.html b/doc/html/pcrepattern.html
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0a42bf2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcrepattern.html
@@ -0,0 +1,1607 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcrepattern specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">PCRE REGULAR EXPRESSION DETAILS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">BACKSLASH</a>
+<li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">CIRCUMFLEX AND DOLLAR</a>
+<li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">FULL STOP (PERIOD, DOT)</a>
+<li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">MATCHING A SINGLE BYTE</a>
+<li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">SQUARE BRACKETS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">POSIX CHARACTER CLASSES</a>
+<li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">VERTICAL BAR</a>
+<li><a name="TOC9" href="#SEC9">INTERNAL OPTION SETTING</a>
+<li><a name="TOC10" href="#SEC10">SUBPATTERNS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC11" href="#SEC11">NAMED SUBPATTERNS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC12" href="#SEC12">REPETITION</a>
+<li><a name="TOC13" href="#SEC13">ATOMIC GROUPING AND POSSESSIVE QUANTIFIERS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC14" href="#SEC14">BACK REFERENCES</a>
+<li><a name="TOC15" href="#SEC15">ASSERTIONS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC16" href="#SEC16">CONDITIONAL SUBPATTERNS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC17" href="#SEC17">COMMENTS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC18" href="#SEC18">RECURSIVE PATTERNS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC19" href="#SEC19">SUBPATTERNS AS SUBROUTINES</a>
+<li><a name="TOC20" href="#SEC20">CALLOUTS</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">PCRE REGULAR EXPRESSION DETAILS</a><br>
+<P>
+The syntax and semantics of the regular expressions supported by PCRE are
+described below. Regular expressions are also described in the Perl
+documentation and in a number of other books, some of which have copious
+examples. Jeffrey Friedl's "Mastering Regular Expressions", published by
+O'Reilly, covers them in great detail. The description here is intended as
+reference documentation.
+</P>
+<P>
+The basic operation of PCRE is on strings of bytes. However, there is also
+support for UTF-8 character strings. To use this support you must build PCRE to
+include UTF-8 support, and then call <b>pcre_compile()</b> with the PCRE_UTF8
+option. How this affects the pattern matching is mentioned in several places
+below. There is also a summary of UTF-8 features in the
+<a href="pcre.html#utf8support">section on UTF-8 support</a>
+in the main
+<a href="pcre.html"><b>pcre</b></a>
+page.
+</P>
+<P>
+A regular expression is a pattern that is matched against a subject string from
+left to right. Most characters stand for themselves in a pattern, and match the
+corresponding characters in the subject. As a trivial example, the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ The quick brown fox
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches a portion of a subject string that is identical to itself. The power of
+regular expressions comes from the ability to include alternatives and
+repetitions in the pattern. These are encoded in the pattern by the use of
+<i>meta-characters</i>, which do not stand for themselves but instead are
+interpreted in some special way.
+</P>
+<P>
+There are two different sets of meta-characters: those that are recognized
+anywhere in the pattern except within square brackets, and those that are
+recognized in square brackets. Outside square brackets, the meta-characters are
+as follows:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \ general escape character with several uses
+ ^ assert start of string (or line, in multiline mode)
+ $ assert end of string (or line, in multiline mode)
+ . match any character except newline (by default)
+ [ start character class definition
+ | start of alternative branch
+ ( start subpattern
+ ) end subpattern
+ ? extends the meaning of (
+ also 0 or 1 quantifier
+ also quantifier minimizer
+ * 0 or more quantifier
+ + 1 or more quantifier
+ also "possessive quantifier"
+ { start min/max quantifier
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Part of a pattern that is in square brackets is called a "character class". In
+a character class the only meta-characters are:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \ general escape character
+ ^ negate the class, but only if the first character
+ - indicates character range
+ [ POSIX character class (only if followed by POSIX
+ syntax)
+ ] terminates the character class
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The following sections describe the use of each of the meta-characters.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">BACKSLASH</a><br>
+<P>
+The backslash character has several uses. Firstly, if it is followed by a
+non-alphameric character, it takes away any special meaning that character may
+have. This use of backslash as an escape character applies both inside and
+outside character classes.
+</P>
+<P>
+For example, if you want to match a * character, you write \* in the pattern.
+This escaping action applies whether or not the following character would
+otherwise be interpreted as a meta-character, so it is always safe to precede a
+non-alphameric with backslash to specify that it stands for itself. In
+particular, if you want to match a backslash, you write \\.
+</P>
+<P>
+If a pattern is compiled with the PCRE_EXTENDED option, whitespace in the
+pattern (other than in a character class) and characters between a # outside
+a character class and the next newline character are ignored. An escaping
+backslash can be used to include a whitespace or # character as part of the
+pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+If you want to remove the special meaning from a sequence of characters, you
+can do so by putting them between \Q and \E. This is different from Perl in
+that $ and @ are handled as literals in \Q...\E sequences in PCRE, whereas in
+Perl, $ and @ cause variable interpolation. Note the following examples:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ Pattern PCRE matches Perl matches
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \Qabc$xyz\E abc$xyz abc followed by the
+ contents of $xyz
+ \Qabc\$xyz\E abc\$xyz abc\$xyz
+ \Qabc\E\$\Qxyz\E abc$xyz abc$xyz
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The \Q...\E sequence is recognized both inside and outside character classes.
+</P>
+<P>
+A second use of backslash provides a way of encoding non-printing characters
+in patterns in a visible manner. There is no restriction on the appearance of
+non-printing characters, apart from the binary zero that terminates a pattern,
+but when a pattern is being prepared by text editing, it is usually easier to
+use one of the following escape sequences than the binary character it
+represents:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \a alarm, that is, the BEL character (hex 07)
+ \cx "control-x", where x is any character
+ \e escape (hex 1B)
+ \f formfeed (hex 0C)
+ \n newline (hex 0A)
+ \r carriage return (hex 0D)
+ \t tab (hex 09)
+ \ddd character with octal code ddd, or backreference
+ \xhh character with hex code hh
+ \x{hhh..} character with hex code hhh... (UTF-8 mode only)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The precise effect of \cx is as follows: if x is a lower case letter, it
+is converted to upper case. Then bit 6 of the character (hex 40) is inverted.
+Thus \cz becomes hex 1A, but \c{ becomes hex 3B, while \c; becomes hex
+7B.
+</P>
+<P>
+After \x, from zero to two hexadecimal digits are read (letters can be in
+upper or lower case). In UTF-8 mode, any number of hexadecimal digits may
+appear between \x{ and }, but the value of the character code must be less
+than 2**31 (that is, the maximum hexadecimal value is 7FFFFFFF). If characters
+other than hexadecimal digits appear between \x{ and }, or if there is no
+terminating }, this form of escape is not recognized. Instead, the initial
+\x will be interpreted as a basic hexadecimal escape, with no following
+digits, giving a byte whose value is zero.
+</P>
+<P>
+Characters whose value is less than 256 can be defined by either of the two
+syntaxes for \x when PCRE is in UTF-8 mode. There is no difference in the
+way they are handled. For example, \xdc is exactly the same as \x{dc}.
+</P>
+<P>
+After \0 up to two further octal digits are read. In both cases, if there
+are fewer than two digits, just those that are present are used. Thus the
+sequence \0\x\07 specifies two binary zeros followed by a BEL character
+(code value 7). Make sure you supply two digits after the initial zero if the
+character that follows is itself an octal digit.
+</P>
+<P>
+The handling of a backslash followed by a digit other than 0 is complicated.
+Outside a character class, PCRE reads it and any following digits as a decimal
+number. If the number is less than 10, or if there have been at least that many
+previous capturing left parentheses in the expression, the entire sequence is
+taken as a <i>back reference</i>. A description of how this works is given
+later, following the discussion of parenthesized subpatterns.
+</P>
+<P>
+Inside a character class, or if the decimal number is greater than 9 and there
+have not been that many capturing subpatterns, PCRE re-reads up to three octal
+digits following the backslash, and generates a single byte from the least
+significant 8 bits of the value. Any subsequent digits stand for themselves.
+For example:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \040 is another way of writing a space
+ \40 is the same, provided there are fewer than 40
+ previous capturing subpatterns
+ \7 is always a back reference
+ \11 might be a back reference, or another way of
+ writing a tab
+ \011 is always a tab
+ \0113 is a tab followed by the character "3"
+ \113 might be a back reference, otherwise the
+ character with octal code 113
+ \377 might be a back reference, otherwise
+ the byte consisting entirely of 1 bits
+ \81 is either a back reference, or a binary zero
+ followed by the two characters "8" and "1"
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Note that octal values of 100 or greater must not be introduced by a leading
+zero, because no more than three octal digits are ever read.
+</P>
+<P>
+All the sequences that define a single byte value or a single UTF-8 character
+(in UTF-8 mode) can be used both inside and outside character classes. In
+addition, inside a character class, the sequence \b is interpreted as the
+backspace character (hex 08). Outside a character class it has a different
+meaning (see below).
+</P>
+<P>
+The third use of backslash is for specifying generic character types:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \d any decimal digit
+ \D any character that is not a decimal digit
+ \s any whitespace character
+ \S any character that is not a whitespace character
+ \w any "word" character
+ \W any "non-word" character
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Each pair of escape sequences partitions the complete set of characters into
+two disjoint sets. Any given character matches one, and only one, of each pair.
+</P>
+<P>
+In UTF-8 mode, characters with values greater than 255 never match \d, \s, or
+\w, and always match \D, \S, and \W.
+</P>
+<P>
+For compatibility with Perl, \s does not match the VT character (code 11).
+This makes it different from the the POSIX "space" class. The \s characters
+are HT (9), LF (10), FF (12), CR (13), and space (32).
+</P>
+<P>
+A "word" character is any letter or digit or the underscore character, that is,
+any character which can be part of a Perl "word". The definition of letters and
+digits is controlled by PCRE's character tables, and may vary if locale-
+specific matching is taking place (see
+<a href="pcreapi.html#localesupport">"Locale support"</a>
+in the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+page). For example, in the "fr" (French) locale, some character codes greater
+than 128 are used for accented letters, and these are matched by \w.
+</P>
+<P>
+These character type sequences can appear both inside and outside character
+classes. They each match one character of the appropriate type. If the current
+matching point is at the end of the subject string, all of them fail, since
+there is no character to match.
+</P>
+<P>
+The fourth use of backslash is for certain simple assertions. An assertion
+specifies a condition that has to be met at a particular point in a match,
+without consuming any characters from the subject string. The use of
+subpatterns for more complicated assertions is described below. The backslashed
+assertions are
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \b matches at a word boundary
+ \B matches when not at a word boundary
+ \A matches at start of subject
+ \Z matches at end of subject or before newline at end
+ \z matches at end of subject
+ \G matches at first matching position in subject
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+These assertions may not appear in character classes (but note that \b has a
+different meaning, namely the backspace character, inside a character class).
+</P>
+<P>
+A word boundary is a position in the subject string where the current character
+and the previous character do not both match \w or \W (i.e. one matches
+\w and the other matches \W), or the start or end of the string if the
+first or last character matches \w, respectively.
+</P>
+<P>
+The \A, \Z, and \z assertions differ from the traditional circumflex and
+dollar (described below) in that they only ever match at the very start and end
+of the subject string, whatever options are set. Thus, they are independent of
+multiline mode.
+</P>
+<P>
+They are not affected by the PCRE_NOTBOL or PCRE_NOTEOL options. If the
+<i>startoffset</i> argument of <b>pcre_exec()</b> is non-zero, indicating that
+matching is to start at a point other than the beginning of the subject, \A
+can never match. The difference between \Z and \z is that \Z matches before
+a newline that is the last character of the string as well as at the end of the
+string, whereas \z matches only at the end.
+</P>
+<P>
+The \G assertion is true only when the current matching position is at the
+start point of the match, as specified by the <i>startoffset</i> argument of
+<b>pcre_exec()</b>. It differs from \A when the value of <i>startoffset</i> is
+non-zero. By calling <b>pcre_exec()</b> multiple times with appropriate
+arguments, you can mimic Perl's /g option, and it is in this kind of
+implementation where \G can be useful.
+</P>
+<P>
+Note, however, that PCRE's interpretation of \G, as the start of the current
+match, is subtly different from Perl's, which defines it as the end of the
+previous match. In Perl, these can be different when the previously matched
+string was empty. Because PCRE does just one match at a time, it cannot
+reproduce this behaviour.
+</P>
+<P>
+If all the alternatives of a pattern begin with \G, the expression is anchored
+to the starting match position, and the "anchored" flag is set in the compiled
+regular expression.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">CIRCUMFLEX AND DOLLAR</a><br>
+<P>
+Outside a character class, in the default matching mode, the circumflex
+character is an assertion which is true only if the current matching point is
+at the start of the subject string. If the <i>startoffset</i> argument of
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> is non-zero, circumflex can never match if the PCRE_MULTILINE
+option is unset. Inside a character class, circumflex has an entirely different
+meaning (see below).
+</P>
+<P>
+Circumflex need not be the first character of the pattern if a number of
+alternatives are involved, but it should be the first thing in each alternative
+in which it appears if the pattern is ever to match that branch. If all
+possible alternatives start with a circumflex, that is, if the pattern is
+constrained to match only at the start of the subject, it is said to be an
+"anchored" pattern. (There are also other constructs that can cause a pattern
+to be anchored.)
+</P>
+<P>
+A dollar character is an assertion which is true only if the current matching
+point is at the end of the subject string, or immediately before a newline
+character that is the last character in the string (by default). Dollar need
+not be the last character of the pattern if a number of alternatives are
+involved, but it should be the last item in any branch in which it appears.
+Dollar has no special meaning in a character class.
+</P>
+<P>
+The meaning of dollar can be changed so that it matches only at the very end of
+the string, by setting the PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option at compile time. This
+does not affect the \Z assertion.
+</P>
+<P>
+The meanings of the circumflex and dollar characters are changed if the
+PCRE_MULTILINE option is set. When this is the case, they match immediately
+after and immediately before an internal newline character, respectively, in
+addition to matching at the start and end of the subject string. For example,
+the pattern /^abc$/ matches the subject string "def\nabc" in multiline mode,
+but not otherwise. Consequently, patterns that are anchored in single line mode
+because all branches start with ^ are not anchored in multiline mode, and a
+match for circumflex is possible when the <i>startoffset</i> argument of
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> is non-zero. The PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option is ignored if
+PCRE_MULTILINE is set.
+</P>
+<P>
+Note that the sequences \A, \Z, and \z can be used to match the start and
+end of the subject in both modes, and if all branches of a pattern start with
+\A it is always anchored, whether PCRE_MULTILINE is set or not.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">FULL STOP (PERIOD, DOT)</a><br>
+<P>
+Outside a character class, a dot in the pattern matches any one character in
+the subject, including a non-printing character, but not (by default) newline.
+In UTF-8 mode, a dot matches any UTF-8 character, which might be more than one
+byte long, except (by default) for newline. If the PCRE_DOTALL option is set,
+dots match newlines as well. The handling of dot is entirely independent of the
+handling of circumflex and dollar, the only relationship being that they both
+involve newline characters. Dot has no special meaning in a character class.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">MATCHING A SINGLE BYTE</a><br>
+<P>
+Outside a character class, the escape sequence \C matches any one byte, both
+in and out of UTF-8 mode. Unlike a dot, it always matches a newline. The
+feature is provided in Perl in order to match individual bytes in UTF-8 mode.
+Because it breaks up UTF-8 characters into individual bytes, what remains in
+the string may be a malformed UTF-8 string. For this reason it is best avoided.
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE does not allow \C to appear in lookbehind assertions (see below), because
+in UTF-8 mode it makes it impossible to calculate the length of the lookbehind.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">SQUARE BRACKETS</a><br>
+<P>
+An opening square bracket introduces a character class, terminated by a closing
+square bracket. A closing square bracket on its own is not special. If a
+closing square bracket is required as a member of the class, it should be the
+first data character in the class (after an initial circumflex, if present) or
+escaped with a backslash.
+</P>
+<P>
+A character class matches a single character in the subject. In UTF-8 mode, the
+character may occupy more than one byte. A matched character must be in the set
+of characters defined by the class, unless the first character in the class
+definition is a circumflex, in which case the subject character must not be in
+the set defined by the class. If a circumflex is actually required as a member
+of the class, ensure it is not the first character, or escape it with a
+backslash.
+</P>
+<P>
+For example, the character class [aeiou] matches any lower case vowel, while
+[^aeiou] matches any character that is not a lower case vowel. Note that a
+circumflex is just a convenient notation for specifying the characters which
+are in the class by enumerating those that are not. It is not an assertion: it
+still consumes a character from the subject string, and fails if the current
+pointer is at the end of the string.
+</P>
+<P>
+In UTF-8 mode, characters with values greater than 255 can be included in a
+class as a literal string of bytes, or by using the \x{ escaping mechanism.
+</P>
+<P>
+When caseless matching is set, any letters in a class represent both their
+upper case and lower case versions, so for example, a caseless [aeiou] matches
+"A" as well as "a", and a caseless [^aeiou] does not match "A", whereas a
+caseful version would. PCRE does not support the concept of case for characters
+with values greater than 255.
+</P>
+<P>
+The newline character is never treated in any special way in character classes,
+whatever the setting of the PCRE_DOTALL or PCRE_MULTILINE options is. A class
+such as [^a] will always match a newline.
+</P>
+<P>
+The minus (hyphen) character can be used to specify a range of characters in a
+character class. For example, [d-m] matches any letter between d and m,
+inclusive. If a minus character is required in a class, it must be escaped with
+a backslash or appear in a position where it cannot be interpreted as
+indicating a range, typically as the first or last character in the class.
+</P>
+<P>
+It is not possible to have the literal character "]" as the end character of a
+range. A pattern such as [W-]46] is interpreted as a class of two characters
+("W" and "-") followed by a literal string "46]", so it would match "W46]" or
+"-46]". However, if the "]" is escaped with a backslash it is interpreted as
+the end of range, so [W-\]46] is interpreted as a single class containing a
+range followed by two separate characters. The octal or hexadecimal
+representation of "]" can also be used to end a range.
+</P>
+<P>
+Ranges operate in the collating sequence of character values. They can also be
+used for characters specified numerically, for example [\000-\037]. In UTF-8
+mode, ranges can include characters whose values are greater than 255, for
+example [\x{100}-\x{2ff}].
+</P>
+<P>
+If a range that includes letters is used when caseless matching is set, it
+matches the letters in either case. For example, [W-c] is equivalent to
+[][\^_`wxyzabc], matched caselessly, and if character tables for the "fr"
+locale are in use, [\xc8-\xcb] matches accented E characters in both cases.
+</P>
+<P>
+The character types \d, \D, \s, \S, \w, and \W may also appear in a
+character class, and add the characters that they match to the class. For
+example, [\dABCDEF] matches any hexadecimal digit. A circumflex can
+conveniently be used with the upper case character types to specify a more
+restricted set of characters than the matching lower case type. For example,
+the class [^\W_] matches any letter or digit, but not underscore.
+</P>
+<P>
+All non-alphameric characters other than \, -, ^ (at the start) and the
+terminating ] are non-special in character classes, but it does no harm if they
+are escaped.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">POSIX CHARACTER CLASSES</a><br>
+<P>
+Perl supports the POSIX notation for character classes, which uses names
+enclosed by [: and :] within the enclosing square brackets. PCRE also supports
+this notation. For example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ [01[:alpha:]%]
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "0", "1", any alphabetic character, or "%". The supported class names
+are
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ alnum letters and digits
+ alpha letters
+ ascii character codes 0 - 127
+ blank space or tab only
+ cntrl control characters
+ digit decimal digits (same as \d)
+ graph printing characters, excluding space
+ lower lower case letters
+ print printing characters, including space
+ punct printing characters, excluding letters and digits
+ space white space (not quite the same as \s)
+ upper upper case letters
+ word "word" characters (same as \w)
+ xdigit hexadecimal digits
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The "space" characters are HT (9), LF (10), VT (11), FF (12), CR (13), and
+space (32). Notice that this list includes the VT character (code 11). This
+makes "space" different to \s, which does not include VT (for Perl
+compatibility).
+</P>
+<P>
+The name "word" is a Perl extension, and "blank" is a GNU extension from Perl
+5.8. Another Perl extension is negation, which is indicated by a ^ character
+after the colon. For example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ [12[:^digit:]]
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "1", "2", or any non-digit. PCRE (and Perl) also recognize the POSIX
+syntax [.ch.] and [=ch=] where "ch" is a "collating element", but these are not
+supported, and an error is given if they are encountered.
+</P>
+<P>
+In UTF-8 mode, characters with values greater than 255 do not match any of
+the POSIX character classes.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">VERTICAL BAR</a><br>
+<P>
+Vertical bar characters are used to separate alternative patterns. For example,
+the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ gilbert|sullivan
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches either "gilbert" or "sullivan". Any number of alternatives may appear,
+and an empty alternative is permitted (matching the empty string).
+The matching process tries each alternative in turn, from left to right,
+and the first one that succeeds is used. If the alternatives are within a
+subpattern (defined below), "succeeds" means matching the rest of the main
+pattern as well as the alternative in the subpattern.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC9" href="#TOC1">INTERNAL OPTION SETTING</a><br>
+<P>
+The settings of the PCRE_CASELESS, PCRE_MULTILINE, PCRE_DOTALL, and
+PCRE_EXTENDED options can be changed from within the pattern by a sequence of
+Perl option letters enclosed between "(?" and ")". The option letters are
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ i for PCRE_CASELESS
+ m for PCRE_MULTILINE
+ s for PCRE_DOTALL
+ x for PCRE_EXTENDED
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+For example, (?im) sets caseless, multiline matching. It is also possible to
+unset these options by preceding the letter with a hyphen, and a combined
+setting and unsetting such as (?im-sx), which sets PCRE_CASELESS and
+PCRE_MULTILINE while unsetting PCRE_DOTALL and PCRE_EXTENDED, is also
+permitted. If a letter appears both before and after the hyphen, the option is
+unset.
+</P>
+<P>
+When an option change occurs at top level (that is, not inside subpattern
+parentheses), the change applies to the remainder of the pattern that follows.
+If the change is placed right at the start of a pattern, PCRE extracts it into
+the global options (and it will therefore show up in data extracted by the
+<b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> function).
+</P>
+<P>
+An option change within a subpattern affects only that part of the current
+pattern that follows it, so
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (a(?i)b)c
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches abc and aBc and no other strings (assuming PCRE_CASELESS is not used).
+By this means, options can be made to have different settings in different
+parts of the pattern. Any changes made in one alternative do carry on
+into subsequent branches within the same subpattern. For example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (a(?i)b|c)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "ab", "aB", "c", and "C", even though when matching "C" the first
+branch is abandoned before the option setting. This is because the effects of
+option settings happen at compile time. There would be some very weird
+behaviour otherwise.
+</P>
+<P>
+The PCRE-specific options PCRE_UNGREEDY and PCRE_EXTRA can be changed in the
+same way as the Perl-compatible options by using the characters U and X
+respectively. The (?X) flag setting is special in that it must always occur
+earlier in the pattern than any of the additional features it turns on, even
+when it is at top level. It is best put at the start.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC10" href="#TOC1">SUBPATTERNS</a><br>
+<P>
+Subpatterns are delimited by parentheses (round brackets), which can be nested.
+Marking part of a pattern as a subpattern does two things:
+</P>
+<P>
+1. It localizes a set of alternatives. For example, the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ cat(aract|erpillar|)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches one of the words "cat", "cataract", or "caterpillar". Without the
+parentheses, it would match "cataract", "erpillar" or the empty string.
+</P>
+<P>
+2. It sets up the subpattern as a capturing subpattern (as defined above).
+When the whole pattern matches, that portion of the subject string that matched
+the subpattern is passed back to the caller via the <i>ovector</i> argument of
+<b>pcre_exec()</b>. Opening parentheses are counted from left to right (starting
+from 1) to obtain the numbers of the capturing subpatterns.
+</P>
+<P>
+For example, if the string "the red king" is matched against the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ the ((red|white) (king|queen))
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+the captured substrings are "red king", "red", and "king", and are numbered 1,
+2, and 3, respectively.
+</P>
+<P>
+The fact that plain parentheses fulfil two functions is not always helpful.
+There are often times when a grouping subpattern is required without a
+capturing requirement. If an opening parenthesis is followed by a question mark
+and a colon, the subpattern does not do any capturing, and is not counted when
+computing the number of any subsequent capturing subpatterns. For example, if
+the string "the white queen" is matched against the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ the ((?:red|white) (king|queen))
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+the captured substrings are "white queen" and "queen", and are numbered 1 and
+2. The maximum number of capturing subpatterns is 65535, and the maximum depth
+of nesting of all subpatterns, both capturing and non-capturing, is 200.
+</P>
+<P>
+As a convenient shorthand, if any option settings are required at the start of
+a non-capturing subpattern, the option letters may appear between the "?" and
+the ":". Thus the two patterns
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?i:saturday|sunday)
+ (?:(?i)saturday|sunday)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+match exactly the same set of strings. Because alternative branches are tried
+from left to right, and options are not reset until the end of the subpattern
+is reached, an option setting in one branch does affect subsequent branches, so
+the above patterns match "SUNDAY" as well as "Saturday".
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC11" href="#TOC1">NAMED SUBPATTERNS</a><br>
+<P>
+Identifying capturing parentheses by number is simple, but it can be very hard
+to keep track of the numbers in complicated regular expressions. Furthermore,
+if an expression is modified, the numbers may change. To help with the
+difficulty, PCRE supports the naming of subpatterns, something that Perl does
+not provide. The Python syntax (?P&#60;name&#62;...) is used. Names consist of
+alphanumeric characters and underscores, and must be unique within a pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+Named capturing parentheses are still allocated numbers as well as names. The
+PCRE API provides function calls for extracting the name-to-number translation
+table from a compiled pattern. For further details see the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+documentation.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC12" href="#TOC1">REPETITION</a><br>
+<P>
+Repetition is specified by quantifiers, which can follow any of the following
+items:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ a literal data character
+ the . metacharacter
+ the \C escape sequence
+ escapes such as \d that match single characters
+ a character class
+ a back reference (see next section)
+ a parenthesized subpattern (unless it is an assertion)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The general repetition quantifier specifies a minimum and maximum number of
+permitted matches, by giving the two numbers in curly brackets (braces),
+separated by a comma. The numbers must be less than 65536, and the first must
+be less than or equal to the second. For example:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ z{2,4}
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "zz", "zzz", or "zzzz". A closing brace on its own is not a special
+character. If the second number is omitted, but the comma is present, there is
+no upper limit; if the second number and the comma are both omitted, the
+quantifier specifies an exact number of required matches. Thus
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ [aeiou]{3,}
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches at least 3 successive vowels, but may match many more, while
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \d{8}
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches exactly 8 digits. An opening curly bracket that appears in a position
+where a quantifier is not allowed, or one that does not match the syntax of a
+quantifier, is taken as a literal character. For example, {,6} is not a
+quantifier, but a literal string of four characters.
+</P>
+<P>
+In UTF-8 mode, quantifiers apply to UTF-8 characters rather than to individual
+bytes. Thus, for example, \x{100}{2} matches two UTF-8 characters, each of
+which is represented by a two-byte sequence.
+</P>
+<P>
+The quantifier {0} is permitted, causing the expression to behave as if the
+previous item and the quantifier were not present.
+</P>
+<P>
+For convenience (and historical compatibility) the three most common
+quantifiers have single-character abbreviations:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ * is equivalent to {0,}
+ + is equivalent to {1,}
+ ? is equivalent to {0,1}
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+It is possible to construct infinite loops by following a subpattern that can
+match no characters with a quantifier that has no upper limit, for example:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (a?)*
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Earlier versions of Perl and PCRE used to give an error at compile time for
+such patterns. However, because there are cases where this can be useful, such
+patterns are now accepted, but if any repetition of the subpattern does in fact
+match no characters, the loop is forcibly broken.
+</P>
+<P>
+By default, the quantifiers are "greedy", that is, they match as much as
+possible (up to the maximum number of permitted times), without causing the
+rest of the pattern to fail. The classic example of where this gives problems
+is in trying to match comments in C programs. These appear between the
+sequences /* and */ and within the sequence, individual * and / characters may
+appear. An attempt to match C comments by applying the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /\*.*\*/
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+to the string
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /* first command */ not comment /* second comment */
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+fails, because it matches the entire string owing to the greediness of the .*
+item.
+</P>
+<P>
+However, if a quantifier is followed by a question mark, it ceases to be
+greedy, and instead matches the minimum number of times possible, so the
+pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /\*.*?\*/
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+does the right thing with the C comments. The meaning of the various
+quantifiers is not otherwise changed, just the preferred number of matches.
+Do not confuse this use of question mark with its use as a quantifier in its
+own right. Because it has two uses, it can sometimes appear doubled, as in
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \d??\d
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+which matches one digit by preference, but can match two if that is the only
+way the rest of the pattern matches.
+</P>
+<P>
+If the PCRE_UNGREEDY option is set (an option which is not available in Perl),
+the quantifiers are not greedy by default, but individual ones can be made
+greedy by following them with a question mark. In other words, it inverts the
+default behaviour.
+</P>
+<P>
+When a parenthesized subpattern is quantified with a minimum repeat count that
+is greater than 1 or with a limited maximum, more store is required for the
+compiled pattern, in proportion to the size of the minimum or maximum.
+</P>
+<P>
+If a pattern starts with .* or .{0,} and the PCRE_DOTALL option (equivalent
+to Perl's /s) is set, thus allowing the . to match newlines, the pattern is
+implicitly anchored, because whatever follows will be tried against every
+character position in the subject string, so there is no point in retrying the
+overall match at any position after the first. PCRE normally treats such a
+pattern as though it were preceded by \A.
+</P>
+<P>
+In cases where it is known that the subject string contains no newlines, it is
+worth setting PCRE_DOTALL in order to obtain this optimization, or
+alternatively using ^ to indicate anchoring explicitly.
+</P>
+<P>
+However, there is one situation where the optimization cannot be used. When .*
+is inside capturing parentheses that are the subject of a backreference
+elsewhere in the pattern, a match at the start may fail, and a later one
+succeed. Consider, for example:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (.*)abc\1
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If the subject is "xyz123abc123" the match point is the fourth character. For
+this reason, such a pattern is not implicitly anchored.
+</P>
+<P>
+When a capturing subpattern is repeated, the value captured is the substring
+that matched the final iteration. For example, after
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (tweedle[dume]{3}\s*)+
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+has matched "tweedledum tweedledee" the value of the captured substring is
+"tweedledee". However, if there are nested capturing subpatterns, the
+corresponding captured values may have been set in previous iterations. For
+example, after
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /(a|(b))+/
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "aba" the value of the second captured substring is "b".
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC13" href="#TOC1">ATOMIC GROUPING AND POSSESSIVE QUANTIFIERS</a><br>
+<P>
+With both maximizing and minimizing repetition, failure of what follows
+normally causes the repeated item to be re-evaluated to see if a different
+number of repeats allows the rest of the pattern to match. Sometimes it is
+useful to prevent this, either to change the nature of the match, or to cause
+it fail earlier than it otherwise might, when the author of the pattern knows
+there is no point in carrying on.
+</P>
+<P>
+Consider, for example, the pattern \d+foo when applied to the subject line
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ 123456bar
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+After matching all 6 digits and then failing to match "foo", the normal
+action of the matcher is to try again with only 5 digits matching the \d+
+item, and then with 4, and so on, before ultimately failing. "Atomic grouping"
+(a term taken from Jeffrey Friedl's book) provides the means for specifying
+that once a subpattern has matched, it is not to be re-evaluated in this way.
+</P>
+<P>
+If we use atomic grouping for the previous example, the matcher would give up
+immediately on failing to match "foo" the first time. The notation is a kind of
+special parenthesis, starting with (?&#62; as in this example:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#62;\d+)bar
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This kind of parenthesis "locks up" the part of the pattern it contains once
+it has matched, and a failure further into the pattern is prevented from
+backtracking into it. Backtracking past it to previous items, however, works as
+normal.
+</P>
+<P>
+An alternative description is that a subpattern of this type matches the string
+of characters that an identical standalone pattern would match, if anchored at
+the current point in the subject string.
+</P>
+<P>
+Atomic grouping subpatterns are not capturing subpatterns. Simple cases such as
+the above example can be thought of as a maximizing repeat that must swallow
+everything it can. So, while both \d+ and \d+? are prepared to adjust the
+number of digits they match in order to make the rest of the pattern match,
+(?&#62;\d+) can only match an entire sequence of digits.
+</P>
+<P>
+Atomic groups in general can of course contain arbitrarily complicated
+subpatterns, and can be nested. However, when the subpattern for an atomic
+group is just a single repeated item, as in the example above, a simpler
+notation, called a "possessive quantifier" can be used. This consists of an
+additional + character following a quantifier. Using this notation, the
+previous example can be rewritten as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \d++bar
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Possessive quantifiers are always greedy; the setting of the PCRE_UNGREEDY
+option is ignored. They are a convenient notation for the simpler forms of
+atomic group. However, there is no difference in the meaning or processing of a
+possessive quantifier and the equivalent atomic group.
+</P>
+<P>
+The possessive quantifier syntax is an extension to the Perl syntax. It
+originates in Sun's Java package.
+</P>
+<P>
+When a pattern contains an unlimited repeat inside a subpattern that can itself
+be repeated an unlimited number of times, the use of an atomic group is the
+only way to avoid some failing matches taking a very long time indeed. The
+pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (\D+|&#60;\d+&#62;)*[!?]
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches an unlimited number of substrings that either consist of non-digits, or
+digits enclosed in &#60;&#62;, followed by either ! or ?. When it matches, it runs
+quickly. However, if it is applied to
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+it takes a long time before reporting failure. This is because the string can
+be divided between the two repeats in a large number of ways, and all have to
+be tried. (The example used [!?] rather than a single character at the end,
+because both PCRE and Perl have an optimization that allows for fast failure
+when a single character is used. They remember the last single character that
+is required for a match, and fail early if it is not present in the string.)
+If the pattern is changed to
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ((?&#62;\D+)|&#60;\d+&#62;)*[!?]
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+sequences of non-digits cannot be broken, and failure happens quickly.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC14" href="#TOC1">BACK REFERENCES</a><br>
+<P>
+Outside a character class, a backslash followed by a digit greater than 0 (and
+possibly further digits) is a back reference to a capturing subpattern earlier
+(that is, to its left) in the pattern, provided there have been that many
+previous capturing left parentheses.
+</P>
+<P>
+However, if the decimal number following the backslash is less than 10, it is
+always taken as a back reference, and causes an error only if there are not
+that many capturing left parentheses in the entire pattern. In other words, the
+parentheses that are referenced need not be to the left of the reference for
+numbers less than 10. See the section entitled "Backslash" above for further
+details of the handling of digits following a backslash.
+</P>
+<P>
+A back reference matches whatever actually matched the capturing subpattern in
+the current subject string, rather than anything matching the subpattern
+itself (see
+<a href="#subpatternsassubroutines">"Subpatterns as subroutines"</a>
+below for a way of doing that). So the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (sens|respons)e and \1ibility
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "sense and sensibility" and "response and responsibility", but not
+"sense and responsibility". If caseful matching is in force at the time of the
+back reference, the case of letters is relevant. For example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ((?i)rah)\s+\1
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "rah rah" and "RAH RAH", but not "RAH rah", even though the original
+capturing subpattern is matched caselessly.
+</P>
+<P>
+Back references to named subpatterns use the Python syntax (?P=name). We could
+rewrite the above example as follows:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;p1&#62;(?i)rah)\s+(?P=p1)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+There may be more than one back reference to the same subpattern. If a
+subpattern has not actually been used in a particular match, any back
+references to it always fail. For example, the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (a|(bc))\2
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+always fails if it starts to match "a" rather than "bc". Because there may be
+many capturing parentheses in a pattern, all digits following the backslash are
+taken as part of a potential back reference number. If the pattern continues
+with a digit character, some delimiter must be used to terminate the back
+reference. If the PCRE_EXTENDED option is set, this can be whitespace.
+Otherwise an empty comment can be used.
+</P>
+<P>
+A back reference that occurs inside the parentheses to which it refers fails
+when the subpattern is first used, so, for example, (a\1) never matches.
+However, such references can be useful inside repeated subpatterns. For
+example, the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (a|b\1)+
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches any number of "a"s and also "aba", "ababbaa" etc. At each iteration of
+the subpattern, the back reference matches the character string corresponding
+to the previous iteration. In order for this to work, the pattern must be such
+that the first iteration does not need to match the back reference. This can be
+done using alternation, as in the example above, or by a quantifier with a
+minimum of zero.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC15" href="#TOC1">ASSERTIONS</a><br>
+<P>
+An assertion is a test on the characters following or preceding the current
+matching point that does not actually consume any characters. The simple
+assertions coded as \b, \B, \A, \G, \Z, \z, ^ and $ are described above.
+More complicated assertions are coded as subpatterns. There are two kinds:
+those that look ahead of the current position in the subject string, and those
+that look behind it.
+</P>
+<P>
+An assertion subpattern is matched in the normal way, except that it does not
+cause the current matching position to be changed. Lookahead assertions start
+with (?= for positive assertions and (?! for negative assertions. For example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \w+(?=;)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches a word followed by a semicolon, but does not include the semicolon in
+the match, and
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ foo(?!bar)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches any occurrence of "foo" that is not followed by "bar". Note that the
+apparently similar pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?!foo)bar
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+does not find an occurrence of "bar" that is preceded by something other than
+"foo"; it finds any occurrence of "bar" whatsoever, because the assertion
+(?!foo) is always true when the next three characters are "bar". A
+lookbehind assertion is needed to achieve this effect.
+</P>
+<P>
+If you want to force a matching failure at some point in a pattern, the most
+convenient way to do it is with (?!) because an empty string always matches, so
+an assertion that requires there not to be an empty string must always fail.
+</P>
+<P>
+Lookbehind assertions start with (?&#60;= for positive assertions and (?&#60;! for
+negative assertions. For example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;!foo)bar
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+does find an occurrence of "bar" that is not preceded by "foo". The contents of
+a lookbehind assertion are restricted such that all the strings it matches must
+have a fixed length. However, if there are several alternatives, they do not
+all have to have the same fixed length. Thus
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;=bullock|donkey)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+is permitted, but
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;!dogs?|cats?)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+causes an error at compile time. Branches that match different length strings
+are permitted only at the top level of a lookbehind assertion. This is an
+extension compared with Perl (at least for 5.8), which requires all branches to
+match the same length of string. An assertion such as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;=ab(c|de))
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+is not permitted, because its single top-level branch can match two different
+lengths, but it is acceptable if rewritten to use two top-level branches:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;=abc|abde)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The implementation of lookbehind assertions is, for each alternative, to
+temporarily move the current position back by the fixed width and then try to
+match. If there are insufficient characters before the current position, the
+match is deemed to fail.
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE does not allow the \C escape (which matches a single byte in UTF-8 mode)
+to appear in lookbehind assertions, because it makes it impossible to calculate
+the length of the lookbehind.
+</P>
+<P>
+Atomic groups can be used in conjunction with lookbehind assertions to specify
+efficient matching at the end of the subject string. Consider a simple pattern
+such as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ abcd$
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+when applied to a long string that does not match. Because matching proceeds
+from left to right, PCRE will look for each "a" in the subject and then see if
+what follows matches the rest of the pattern. If the pattern is specified as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ^.*abcd$
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+the initial .* matches the entire string at first, but when this fails (because
+there is no following "a"), it backtracks to match all but the last character,
+then all but the last two characters, and so on. Once again the search for "a"
+covers the entire string, from right to left, so we are no better off. However,
+if the pattern is written as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ^(?&#62;.*)(?&#60;=abcd)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+or, equivalently,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ^.*+(?&#60;=abcd)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+there can be no backtracking for the .* item; it can match only the entire
+string. The subsequent lookbehind assertion does a single test on the last four
+characters. If it fails, the match fails immediately. For long strings, this
+approach makes a significant difference to the processing time.
+</P>
+<P>
+Several assertions (of any sort) may occur in succession. For example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;=\d{3})(?&#60;!999)foo
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "foo" preceded by three digits that are not "999". Notice that each of
+the assertions is applied independently at the same point in the subject
+string. First there is a check that the previous three characters are all
+digits, and then there is a check that the same three characters are not "999".
+This pattern does <i>not</i> match "foo" preceded by six characters, the first
+of which are digits and the last three of which are not "999". For example, it
+doesn't match "123abcfoo". A pattern to do that is
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;=\d{3}...)(?&#60;!999)foo
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This time the first assertion looks at the preceding six characters, checking
+that the first three are digits, and then the second assertion checks that the
+preceding three characters are not "999".
+</P>
+<P>
+Assertions can be nested in any combination. For example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;=(?&#60;!foo)bar)baz
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches an occurrence of "baz" that is preceded by "bar" which in turn is not
+preceded by "foo", while
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;=\d{3}(?!999)...)foo
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+is another pattern which matches "foo" preceded by three digits and any three
+characters that are not "999".
+</P>
+<P>
+Assertion subpatterns are not capturing subpatterns, and may not be repeated,
+because it makes no sense to assert the same thing several times. If any kind
+of assertion contains capturing subpatterns within it, these are counted for
+the purposes of numbering the capturing subpatterns in the whole pattern.
+However, substring capturing is carried out only for positive assertions,
+because it does not make sense for negative assertions.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC16" href="#TOC1">CONDITIONAL SUBPATTERNS</a><br>
+<P>
+It is possible to cause the matching process to obey a subpattern
+conditionally or to choose between two alternative subpatterns, depending on
+the result of an assertion, or whether a previous capturing subpattern matched
+or not. The two possible forms of conditional subpattern are
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?(condition)yes-pattern)
+ (?(condition)yes-pattern|no-pattern)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If the condition is satisfied, the yes-pattern is used; otherwise the
+no-pattern (if present) is used. If there are more than two alternatives in the
+subpattern, a compile-time error occurs.
+</P>
+<P>
+There are three kinds of condition. If the text between the parentheses
+consists of a sequence of digits, the condition is satisfied if the capturing
+subpattern of that number has previously matched. The number must be greater
+than zero. Consider the following pattern, which contains non-significant white
+space to make it more readable (assume the PCRE_EXTENDED option) and to divide
+it into three parts for ease of discussion:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ( \( )? [^()]+ (?(1) \) )
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The first part matches an optional opening parenthesis, and if that
+character is present, sets it as the first captured substring. The second part
+matches one or more characters that are not parentheses. The third part is a
+conditional subpattern that tests whether the first set of parentheses matched
+or not. If they did, that is, if subject started with an opening parenthesis,
+the condition is true, and so the yes-pattern is executed and a closing
+parenthesis is required. Otherwise, since no-pattern is not present, the
+subpattern matches nothing. In other words, this pattern matches a sequence of
+non-parentheses, optionally enclosed in parentheses.
+</P>
+<P>
+If the condition is the string (R), it is satisfied if a recursive call to the
+pattern or subpattern has been made. At "top level", the condition is false.
+This is a PCRE extension. Recursive patterns are described in the next section.
+</P>
+<P>
+If the condition is not a sequence of digits or (R), it must be an assertion.
+This may be a positive or negative lookahead or lookbehind assertion. Consider
+this pattern, again containing non-significant white space, and with the two
+alternatives on the second line:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?(?=[^a-z]*[a-z])
+ \d{2}-[a-z]{3}-\d{2} | \d{2}-\d{2}-\d{2} )
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The condition is a positive lookahead assertion that matches an optional
+sequence of non-letters followed by a letter. In other words, it tests for the
+presence of at least one letter in the subject. If a letter is found, the
+subject is matched against the first alternative; otherwise it is matched
+against the second. This pattern matches strings in one of the two forms
+dd-aaa-dd or dd-dd-dd, where aaa are letters and dd are digits.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC17" href="#TOC1">COMMENTS</a><br>
+<P>
+The sequence (?# marks the start of a comment which continues up to the next
+closing parenthesis. Nested parentheses are not permitted. The characters
+that make up a comment play no part in the pattern matching at all.
+</P>
+<P>
+If the PCRE_EXTENDED option is set, an unescaped # character outside a
+character class introduces a comment that continues up to the next newline
+character in the pattern.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC18" href="#TOC1">RECURSIVE PATTERNS</a><br>
+<P>
+Consider the problem of matching a string in parentheses, allowing for
+unlimited nested parentheses. Without the use of recursion, the best that can
+be done is to use a pattern that matches up to some fixed depth of nesting. It
+is not possible to handle an arbitrary nesting depth. Perl has provided an
+experimental facility that allows regular expressions to recurse (amongst other
+things). It does this by interpolating Perl code in the expression at run time,
+and the code can refer to the expression itself. A Perl pattern to solve the
+parentheses problem can be created like this:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ $re = qr{\( (?: (?&#62;[^()]+) | (?p{$re}) )* \)}x;
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The (?p{...}) item interpolates Perl code at run time, and in this case refers
+recursively to the pattern in which it appears. Obviously, PCRE cannot support
+the interpolation of Perl code. Instead, it supports some special syntax for
+recursion of the entire pattern, and also for individual subpattern recursion.
+</P>
+<P>
+The special item that consists of (? followed by a number greater than zero and
+a closing parenthesis is a recursive call of the subpattern of the given
+number, provided that it occurs inside that subpattern. (If not, it is a
+"subroutine" call, which is described in the next section.) The special item
+(?R) is a recursive call of the entire regular expression.
+</P>
+<P>
+For example, this PCRE pattern solves the nested parentheses problem (assume
+the PCRE_EXTENDED option is set so that white space is ignored):
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \( ( (?&#62;[^()]+) | (?R) )* \)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+First it matches an opening parenthesis. Then it matches any number of
+substrings which can either be a sequence of non-parentheses, or a recursive
+match of the pattern itself (that is a correctly parenthesized substring).
+Finally there is a closing parenthesis.
+</P>
+<P>
+If this were part of a larger pattern, you would not want to recurse the entire
+pattern, so instead you could use this:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ( \( ( (?&#62;[^()]+) | (?1) )* \) )
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+We have put the pattern into parentheses, and caused the recursion to refer to
+them instead of the whole pattern. In a larger pattern, keeping track of
+parenthesis numbers can be tricky. It may be more convenient to use named
+parentheses instead. For this, PCRE uses (?P&#62;name), which is an extension to
+the Python syntax that PCRE uses for named parentheses (Perl does not provide
+named parentheses). We could rewrite the above example as follows:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?&#60;pn&#62; \( ( (?&#62;[^()]+) | (?P&#62;pn) )* \) )
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This particular example pattern contains nested unlimited repeats, and so the
+use of atomic grouping for matching strings of non-parentheses is important
+when applying the pattern to strings that do not match. For example, when this
+pattern is applied to
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa()
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+it yields "no match" quickly. However, if atomic grouping is not used,
+the match runs for a very long time indeed because there are so many different
+ways the + and * repeats can carve up the subject, and all have to be tested
+before failure can be reported.
+</P>
+<P>
+At the end of a match, the values set for any capturing subpatterns are those
+from the outermost level of the recursion at which the subpattern value is set.
+If you want to obtain intermediate values, a callout function can be used (see
+below and the
+<a href="pcrecallout.html"><b>pcrecallout</b></a>
+documentation). If the pattern above is matched against
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (ab(cd)ef)
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+the value for the capturing parentheses is "ef", which is the last value taken
+on at the top level. If additional parentheses are added, giving
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \( ( ( (?&#62;[^()]+) | (?R) )* ) \)
+ ^ ^
+ ^ ^
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+the string they capture is "ab(cd)ef", the contents of the top level
+parentheses. If there are more than 15 capturing parentheses in a pattern, PCRE
+has to obtain extra memory to store data during a recursion, which it does by
+using <b>pcre_malloc</b>, freeing it via <b>pcre_free</b> afterwards. If no
+memory can be obtained, the match fails with the PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY error.
+</P>
+<P>
+Do not confuse the (?R) item with the condition (R), which tests for recursion.
+Consider this pattern, which matches text in angle brackets, allowing for
+arbitrary nesting. Only digits are allowed in nested brackets (that is, when
+recursing), whereas any characters are permitted at the outer level.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ &#60; (?: (?(R) \d++ | [^&#60;&#62;]*+) | (?R)) * &#62;
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+In this pattern, (?(R) is the start of a conditional subpattern, with two
+different alternatives for the recursive and non-recursive cases. The (?R) item
+is the actual recursive call.
+</P>
+<a name="subpatternsassubroutines"></a><br><a name="SEC19" href="#TOC1">SUBPATTERNS AS SUBROUTINES</a><br>
+<P>
+If the syntax for a recursive subpattern reference (either by number or by
+name) is used outside the parentheses to which it refers, it operates like a
+subroutine in a programming language. An earlier example pointed out that the
+pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (sens|respons)e and \1ibility
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches "sense and sensibility" and "response and responsibility", but not
+"sense and responsibility". If instead the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (sens|respons)e and (?1)ibility
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+is used, it does match "sense and responsibility" as well as the other two
+strings. Such references must, however, follow the subpattern to which they
+refer.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC20" href="#TOC1">CALLOUTS</a><br>
+<P>
+Perl has a feature whereby using the sequence (?{...}) causes arbitrary Perl
+code to be obeyed in the middle of matching a regular expression. This makes it
+possible, amongst other things, to extract different substrings that match the
+same pair of parentheses when there is a repetition.
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE provides a similar feature, but of course it cannot obey arbitrary Perl
+code. The feature is called "callout". The caller of PCRE provides an external
+function by putting its entry point in the global variable <i>pcre_callout</i>.
+By default, this variable contains NULL, which disables all calling out.
+</P>
+<P>
+Within a regular expression, (?C) indicates the points at which the external
+function is to be called. If you want to identify different callout points, you
+can put a number less than 256 after the letter C. The default value is zero.
+For example, this pattern has two callout points:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (?C1)\dabc(?C2)def
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+During matching, when PCRE reaches a callout point (and <i>pcre_callout</i> is
+set), the external function is called. It is provided with the number of the
+callout, and, optionally, one item of data originally supplied by the caller of
+<b>pcre_exec()</b>. The callout function may cause matching to backtrack, or to
+fail altogether. A complete description of the interface to the callout
+function is given in the
+<a href="pcrecallout.html"><b>pcrecallout</b></a>
+documentation.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 03 February 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcreperform.html b/doc/html/pcreperform.html
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@@ -0,0 +1,93 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcreperform specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">PCRE PERFORMANCE</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">PCRE PERFORMANCE</a><br>
+<P>
+Certain items that may appear in regular expression patterns are more efficient
+than others. It is more efficient to use a character class like [aeiou] than a
+set of alternatives such as (a|e|i|o|u). In general, the simplest construction
+that provides the required behaviour is usually the most efficient. Jeffrey
+Friedl's book contains a lot of discussion about optimizing regular expressions
+for efficient performance.
+</P>
+<P>
+When a pattern begins with .* not in parentheses, or in parentheses that are
+not the subject of a backreference, and the PCRE_DOTALL option is set, the
+pattern is implicitly anchored by PCRE, since it can match only at the start of
+a subject string. However, if PCRE_DOTALL is not set, PCRE cannot make this
+optimization, because the . metacharacter does not then match a newline, and if
+the subject string contains newlines, the pattern may match from the character
+immediately following one of them instead of from the very start. For example,
+the pattern
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ .*second
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+matches the subject "first\nand second" (where \n stands for a newline
+character), with the match starting at the seventh character. In order to do
+this, PCRE has to retry the match starting after every newline in the subject.
+</P>
+<P>
+If you are using such a pattern with subject strings that do not contain
+newlines, the best performance is obtained by setting PCRE_DOTALL, or starting
+the pattern with ^.* to indicate explicit anchoring. That saves PCRE from
+having to scan along the subject looking for a newline to restart at.
+</P>
+<P>
+Beware of patterns that contain nested indefinite repeats. These can take a
+long time to run when applied to a string that does not match. Consider the
+pattern fragment
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (a+)*
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This can match "aaaa" in 33 different ways, and this number increases very
+rapidly as the string gets longer. (The * repeat can match 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4
+times, and for each of those cases other than 0, the + repeats can match
+different numbers of times.) When the remainder of the pattern is such that the
+entire match is going to fail, PCRE has in principle to try every possible
+variation, and this can take an extremely long time.
+</P>
+<P>
+An optimization catches some of the more simple cases such as
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (a+)*b
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+where a literal character follows. Before embarking on the standard matching
+procedure, PCRE checks that there is a "b" later in the subject string, and if
+there is not, it fails the match immediately. However, when there is no
+following literal this optimization cannot be used. You can see the difference
+by comparing the behaviour of
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ (a+)*\d
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+with the pattern above. The former gives a failure almost instantly when
+applied to a whole line of "a" characters, whereas the latter takes an
+appreciable time with strings longer than about 20 characters.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 03 February 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcreposix.html b/doc/html/pcreposix.html
new file mode 100644
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/html/pcreposix.html
@@ -0,0 +1,235 @@
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcreposix specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">SYNOPSIS OF POSIX API</a>
+<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">DESCRIPTION</a>
+<li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">COMPILING A PATTERN</a>
+<li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">MATCHING NEWLINE CHARACTERS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">MATCHING A PATTERN</a>
+<li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">ERROR MESSAGES</a>
+<li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">STORAGE</a>
+<li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">AUTHOR</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">SYNOPSIS OF POSIX API</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>#include &#60;pcreposix.h&#62;</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int regcomp(regex_t *<i>preg</i>, const char *<i>pattern</i>,</b>
+<b>int <i>cflags</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>int regexec(regex_t *<i>preg</i>, const char *<i>string</i>,</b>
+<b>size_t <i>nmatch</i>, regmatch_t <i>pmatch</i>[], int <i>eflags</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>size_t regerror(int <i>errcode</i>, const regex_t *<i>preg</i>,</b>
+<b>char *<i>errbuf</i>, size_t <i>errbuf_size</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>void regfree(regex_t *<i>preg</i>);</b>
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
+<P>
+This set of functions provides a POSIX-style API to the PCRE regular expression
+package. See the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+documentation for a description of the native API, which contains additional
+functionality.
+</P>
+<P>
+The functions described here are just wrapper functions that ultimately call
+the PCRE native API. Their prototypes are defined in the <b>pcreposix.h</b>
+header file, and on Unix systems the library itself is called
+<b>pcreposix.a</b>, so can be accessed by adding <b>-lpcreposix</b> to the
+command for linking an application which uses them. Because the POSIX functions
+call the native ones, it is also necessary to add \fR-lpcre\fR.
+</P>
+<P>
+I have implemented only those option bits that can be reasonably mapped to PCRE
+native options. In addition, the options REG_EXTENDED and REG_NOSUB are defined
+with the value zero. They have no effect, but since programs that are written
+to the POSIX interface often use them, this makes it easier to slot in PCRE as
+a replacement library. Other POSIX options are not even defined.
+</P>
+<P>
+When PCRE is called via these functions, it is only the API that is POSIX-like
+in style. The syntax and semantics of the regular expressions themselves are
+still those of Perl, subject to the setting of various PCRE options, as
+described below.
+</P>
+<P>
+The header for these functions is supplied as <b>pcreposix.h</b> to avoid any
+potential clash with other POSIX libraries. It can, of course, be renamed or
+aliased as <b>regex.h</b>, which is the "correct" name. It provides two
+structure types, <i>regex_t</i> for compiled internal forms, and
+<i>regmatch_t</i> for returning captured substrings. It also defines some
+constants whose names start with "REG_"; these are used for setting options and
+identifying error codes.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">COMPILING A PATTERN</a><br>
+<P>
+The function <b>regcomp()</b> is called to compile a pattern into an
+internal form. The pattern is a C string terminated by a binary zero, and
+is passed in the argument <i>pattern</i>. The <i>preg</i> argument is a pointer
+to a regex_t structure which is used as a base for storing information about
+the compiled expression.
+</P>
+<P>
+The argument <i>cflags</i> is either zero, or contains one or more of the bits
+defined by the following macros:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ REG_ICASE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The PCRE_CASELESS option is set when the expression is passed for compilation
+to the native function.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ REG_NEWLINE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The PCRE_MULTILINE option is set when the expression is passed for compilation
+to the native function. Note that this does <i>not</i> mimic the defined POSIX
+behaviour for REG_NEWLINE (see the following section).
+</P>
+<P>
+In the absence of these flags, no options are passed to the native function.
+This means the the regex is compiled with PCRE default semantics. In
+particular, the way it handles newline characters in the subject string is the
+Perl way, not the POSIX way. Note that setting PCRE_MULTILINE has only
+<i>some</i> of the effects specified for REG_NEWLINE. It does not affect the way
+newlines are matched by . (they aren't) or by a negative class such as [^a]
+(they are).
+</P>
+<P>
+The yield of <b>regcomp()</b> is zero on success, and non-zero otherwise. The
+<i>preg</i> structure is filled in on success, and one member of the structure
+is public: <i>re_nsub</i> contains the number of capturing subpatterns in
+the regular expression. Various error codes are defined in the header file.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">MATCHING NEWLINE CHARACTERS</a><br>
+<P>
+This area is not simple, because POSIX and Perl take different views of things.
+It is not possible to get PCRE to obey POSIX semantics, but then PCRE was never
+intended to be a POSIX engine. The following table lists the different
+possibilities for matching newline characters in PCRE:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ Default Change with
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ . matches newline no PCRE_DOTALL
+ newline matches [^a] yes not changeable
+ $ matches \n at end yes PCRE_DOLLARENDONLY
+ $ matches \n in middle no PCRE_MULTILINE
+ ^ matches \n in middle no PCRE_MULTILINE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This is the equivalent table for POSIX:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ Default Change with
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ . matches newline yes REG_NEWLINE
+ newline matches [^a] yes REG_NEWLINE
+ $ matches \n at end no REG_NEWLINE
+ $ matches \n in middle no REG_NEWLINE
+ ^ matches \n in middle no REG_NEWLINE
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+PCRE's behaviour is the same as Perl's, except that there is no equivalent for
+PCRE_DOLLARENDONLY in Perl. In both PCRE and Perl, there is no way to stop
+newline from matching [^a].
+</P>
+<P>
+The default POSIX newline handling can be obtained by setting PCRE_DOTALL and
+PCRE_DOLLARENDONLY, but there is no way to make PCRE behave exactly as for the
+REG_NEWLINE action.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">MATCHING A PATTERN</a><br>
+<P>
+The function <b>regexec()</b> is called to match a pre-compiled pattern
+<i>preg</i> against a given <i>string</i>, which is terminated by a zero byte,
+subject to the options in <i>eflags</i>. These can be:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ REG_NOTBOL
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The PCRE_NOTBOL option is set when calling the underlying PCRE matching
+function.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ REG_NOTEOL
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+The PCRE_NOTEOL option is set when calling the underlying PCRE matching
+function.
+</P>
+<P>
+The portion of the string that was matched, and also any captured substrings,
+are returned via the <i>pmatch</i> argument, which points to an array of
+<i>nmatch</i> structures of type <i>regmatch_t</i>, containing the members
+<i>rm_so</i> and <i>rm_eo</i>. These contain the offset to the first character of
+each substring and the offset to the first character after the end of each
+substring, respectively. The 0th element of the vector relates to the entire
+portion of <i>string</i> that was matched; subsequent elements relate to the
+capturing subpatterns of the regular expression. Unused entries in the array
+have both structure members set to -1.
+</P>
+<P>
+A successful match yields a zero return; various error codes are defined in the
+header file, of which REG_NOMATCH is the "expected" failure code.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">ERROR MESSAGES</a><br>
+<P>
+The <b>regerror()</b> function maps a non-zero errorcode from either
+<b>regcomp()</b> or <b>regexec()</b> to a printable message. If <i>preg</i> is not
+NULL, the error should have arisen from the use of that structure. A message
+terminated by a binary zero is placed in <i>errbuf</i>. The length of the
+message, including the zero, is limited to <i>errbuf_size</i>. The yield of the
+function is the size of buffer needed to hold the whole message.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">STORAGE</a><br>
+<P>
+Compiling a regular expression causes memory to be allocated and associated
+with the <i>preg</i> structure. The function <b>regfree()</b> frees all such
+memory, after which <i>preg</i> may no longer be used as a compiled expression.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
+<P>
+Philip Hazel &#60;ph10@cam.ac.uk&#62;
+<br>
+University Computing Service,
+<br>
+Cambridge CB2 3QG, England.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 03 February 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
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+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcresample specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">PCRE SAMPLE PROGRAM</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">PCRE SAMPLE PROGRAM</a><br>
+<P>
+A simple, complete demonstration program, to get you started with using PCRE,
+is supplied in the file <i>pcredemo.c</i> in the PCRE distribution.
+</P>
+<P>
+The program compiles the regular expression that is its first argument, and
+matches it against the subject string in its second argument. No PCRE options
+are set, and default character tables are used. If matching succeeds, the
+program outputs the portion of the subject that matched, together with the
+contents of any captured substrings.
+</P>
+<P>
+If the -g option is given on the command line, the program then goes on to
+check for further matches of the same regular expression in the same subject
+string. The logic is a little bit tricky because of the possibility of matching
+an empty string. Comments in the code explain what is going on.
+</P>
+<P>
+On a Unix system that has PCRE installed in <i>/usr/local</i>, you can compile
+the demonstration program using a command like this:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ gcc -o pcredemo pcredemo.c -I/usr/local/include \
+ -L/usr/local/lib -lpcre
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Then you can run simple tests like this:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ./pcredemo 'cat|dog' 'the cat sat on the mat'
+ ./pcredemo -g 'cat|dog' 'the dog sat on the cat'
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+Note that there is a much more comprehensive test program, called
+<b>pcretest</b>, which supports many more facilities for testing regular
+expressions and the PCRE library. The <b>pcredemo</b> program is provided as a
+simple coding example.
+</P>
+<P>
+On some operating systems (e.g. Solaris) you may get an error like this when
+you try to run <b>pcredemo</b>:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ld.so.1: a.out: fatal: libpcre.so.0: open failed: No such file or directory
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+This is caused by the way shared library support works on those systems. You
+need to add
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ -R/usr/local/lib
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+to the compile command to get round this problem.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 28 January 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.
diff --git a/doc/html/pcretest.html b/doc/html/pcretest.html
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+++ b/doc/html/pcretest.html
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+<html>
+<head>
+<title>pcretest specification</title>
+</head>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
+This HTML document has been generated automatically from the original man page.
+If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the man page, in case the
+conversion went wrong.<br>
+<ul>
+<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">SYNOPSIS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">OPTIONS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">DESCRIPTION</a>
+<li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">PATTERN MODIFIERS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">CALLOUTS</a>
+<li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">DATA LINES</a>
+<li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">OUTPUT FROM PCRETEST</a>
+<li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">AUTHOR</a>
+</ul>
+<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">SYNOPSIS</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>pcretest [-d] [-i] [-m] [-o osize] [-p] [-t] [source] [destination]</b>
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>pcretest</b> was written as a test program for the PCRE regular expression
+library itself, but it can also be used for experimenting with regular
+expressions. This document describes the features of the test program; for
+details of the regular expressions themselves, see the
+<a href="pcrepattern.html"><b>pcrepattern</b></a>
+documentation. For details of PCRE and its options, see the
+<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
+documentation.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">OPTIONS</a><br>
+<P>
+<b>-C</b>
+Output the version number of the PCRE library, and all available information
+about the optional features that are included, and then exit.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-d</b>
+Behave as if each regex had the <b>/D</b> modifier (see below); the internal
+form is output after compilation.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-i</b>
+Behave as if each regex had the <b>/I</b> modifier; information about the
+compiled pattern is given after compilation.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-m</b>
+Output the size of each compiled pattern after it has been compiled. This is
+equivalent to adding /M to each regular expression. For compatibility with
+earlier versions of pcretest, <b>-s</b> is a synonym for <b>-m</b>.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-o</b> <i>osize</i>
+Set the number of elements in the output vector that is used when calling PCRE
+to be <i>osize</i>. The default value is 45, which is enough for 14 capturing
+subexpressions. The vector size can be changed for individual matching calls by
+including \O in the data line (see below).
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-p</b>
+Behave as if each regex has <b>/P</b> modifier; the POSIX wrapper API is used
+to call PCRE. None of the other options has any effect when <b>-p</b> is set.
+</P>
+<P>
+<b>-t</b>
+Run each compile, study, and match many times with a timer, and output
+resulting time per compile or match (in milliseconds). Do not set <b>-t</b> with
+<b>-m</b>, because you will then get the size output 20000 times and the timing
+will be distorted.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
+<P>
+If <b>pcretest</b> is given two filename arguments, it reads from the first and
+writes to the second. If it is given only one filename argument, it reads from
+that file and writes to stdout. Otherwise, it reads from stdin and writes to
+stdout, and prompts for each line of input, using "re&#62;" to prompt for regular
+expressions, and "data&#62;" to prompt for data lines.
+</P>
+<P>
+The program handles any number of sets of input on a single input file. Each
+set starts with a regular expression, and continues with any number of data
+lines to be matched against the pattern.
+</P>
+<P>
+Each line is matched separately and independently. If you want to do
+multiple-line matches, you have to use the \n escape sequence in a single line
+of input to encode the newline characters. The maximum length of data line is
+30,000 characters.
+</P>
+<P>
+An empty line signals the end of the data lines, at which point a new regular
+expression is read. The regular expressions are given enclosed in any
+non-alphameric delimiters other than backslash, for example
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /(a|bc)x+yz/
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+White space before the initial delimiter is ignored. A regular expression may
+be continued over several input lines, in which case the newline characters are
+included within it. It is possible to include the delimiter within the pattern
+by escaping it, for example
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /abc\/def/
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If you do so, the escape and the delimiter form part of the pattern, but since
+delimiters are always non-alphameric, this does not affect its interpretation.
+If the terminating delimiter is immediately followed by a backslash, for
+example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /abc/\
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+then a backslash is added to the end of the pattern. This is done to provide a
+way of testing the error condition that arises if a pattern finishes with a
+backslash, because
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /abc\/
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+is interpreted as the first line of a pattern that starts with "abc/", causing
+pcretest to read the next line as a continuation of the regular expression.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">PATTERN MODIFIERS</a><br>
+<P>
+The pattern may be followed by <b>i</b>, <b>m</b>, <b>s</b>, or <b>x</b> to set the
+PCRE_CASELESS, PCRE_MULTILINE, PCRE_DOTALL, or PCRE_EXTENDED options,
+respectively. For example:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /caseless/i
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+These modifier letters have the same effect as they do in Perl. There are
+others which set PCRE options that do not correspond to anything in Perl:
+<b>/A</b>, <b>/E</b>, and <b>/X</b> set PCRE_ANCHORED, PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY, and
+PCRE_EXTRA respectively.
+</P>
+<P>
+Searching for all possible matches within each subject string can be requested
+by the <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> modifier. After finding a match, PCRE is called
+again to search the remainder of the subject string. The difference between
+<b>/g</b> and <b>/G</b> is that the former uses the <i>startoffset</i> argument to
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> to start searching at a new point within the entire string
+(which is in effect what Perl does), whereas the latter passes over a shortened
+substring. This makes a difference to the matching process if the pattern
+begins with a lookbehind assertion (including \b or \B).
+</P>
+<P>
+If any call to <b>pcre_exec()</b> in a <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> sequence matches an
+empty string, the next call is done with the PCRE_NOTEMPTY and PCRE_ANCHORED
+flags set in order to search for another, non-empty, match at the same point.
+If this second match fails, the start offset is advanced by one, and the normal
+match is retried. This imitates the way Perl handles such cases when using the
+<b>/g</b> modifier or the <b>split()</b> function.
+</P>
+<P>
+There are a number of other modifiers for controlling the way <b>pcretest</b>
+operates.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>/+</b> modifier requests that as well as outputting the substring that
+matched the entire pattern, pcretest should in addition output the remainder of
+the subject string. This is useful for tests where the subject contains
+multiple copies of the same substring.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>/L</b> modifier must be followed directly by the name of a locale, for
+example,
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ /pattern/Lfr
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+For this reason, it must be the last modifier letter. The given locale is set,
+<b>pcre_maketables()</b> is called to build a set of character tables for the
+locale, and this is then passed to <b>pcre_compile()</b> when compiling the
+regular expression. Without an <b>/L</b> modifier, NULL is passed as the tables
+pointer; that is, <b>/L</b> applies only to the expression on which it appears.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>/I</b> modifier requests that <b>pcretest</b> output information about the
+compiled expression (whether it is anchored, has a fixed first character, and
+so on). It does this by calling <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> after compiling an
+expression, and outputting the information it gets back. If the pattern is
+studied, the results of that are also output.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>/D</b> modifier is a PCRE debugging feature, which also assumes <b>/I</b>.
+It causes the internal form of compiled regular expressions to be output after
+compilation. If the pattern was studied, the information returned is also
+output.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>/S</b> modifier causes <b>pcre_study()</b> to be called after the
+expression has been compiled, and the results used when the expression is
+matched.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>/M</b> modifier causes the size of memory block used to hold the compiled
+pattern to be output.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>/P</b> modifier causes <b>pcretest</b> to call PCRE via the POSIX wrapper
+API rather than its native API. When this is done, all other modifiers except
+<b>/i</b>, <b>/m</b>, and <b>/+</b> are ignored. REG_ICASE is set if <b>/i</b> is
+present, and REG_NEWLINE is set if <b>/m</b> is present. The wrapper functions
+force PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY always, and PCRE_DOTALL unless REG_NEWLINE is set.
+</P>
+<P>
+The <b>/8</b> modifier causes <b>pcretest</b> to call PCRE with the PCRE_UTF8
+option set. This turns on support for UTF-8 character handling in PCRE,
+provided that it was compiled with this support enabled. This modifier also
+causes any non-printing characters in output strings to be printed using the
+\x{hh...} notation if they are valid UTF-8 sequences.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">CALLOUTS</a><br>
+<P>
+If the pattern contains any callout requests, <b>pcretest</b>'s callout function
+will be called. By default, it displays the callout number, and the start and
+current positions in the text at the callout time. For example, the output
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ ---&#62;pqrabcdef
+ 0 ^ ^
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+indicates that callout number 0 occurred for a match attempt starting at the
+fourth character of the subject string, when the pointer was at the seventh
+character. The callout function returns zero (carry on matching) by default.
+</P>
+<P>
+Inserting callouts may be helpful when using <b>pcretest</b> to check
+complicated regular expressions. For further information about callouts, see
+the
+<a href="pcrecallout.html"><b>pcrecallout</b></a>
+documentation.
+</P>
+<P>
+For testing the PCRE library, additional control of callout behaviour is
+available via escape sequences in the data, as described in the following
+section. In particular, it is possible to pass in a number as callout data (the
+default is zero). If the callout function receives a non-zero number, it
+returns that value instead of zero.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">DATA LINES</a><br>
+<P>
+Before each data line is passed to <b>pcre_exec()</b>, leading and trailing
+whitespace is removed, and it is then scanned for \ escapes. Some of these are
+pretty esoteric features, intended for checking out some of the more
+complicated features of PCRE. If you are just testing "ordinary" regular
+expressions, you probably don't need any of these. The following escapes are
+recognized:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ \a alarm (= BEL)
+ \b backspace
+ \e escape
+ \f formfeed
+ \n newline
+ \r carriage return
+ \t tab
+ \v vertical tab
+ \nnn octal character (up to 3 octal digits)
+ \xhh hexadecimal character (up to 2 hex digits)
+ \x{hh...} hexadecimal character, any number of digits
+ in UTF-8 mode
+ \A pass the PCRE_ANCHORED option to <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+ \B pass the PCRE_NOTBOL option to <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+ \Cdd call pcre_copy_substring() for substring dd
+ after a successful match (any decimal number
+ less than 32)
+ \Cname call pcre_copy_named_substring() for substring
+ "name" after a successful match (name termin-
+ ated by next non alphanumeric character)
+ \C+ show the current captured substrings at callout
+ time
+ \C- do not supply a callout function
+ \C!n return 1 instead of 0 when callout number n is
+ reached
+ \C!n!m return 1 instead of 0 when callout number n is
+ reached for the nth time
+ \C*n pass the number n (may be negative) as callout
+ data
+ \Gdd call pcre_get_substring() for substring dd
+ after a successful match (any decimal number
+ less than 32)
+ \Gname call pcre_get_named_substring() for substring
+ "name" after a successful match (name termin-
+ ated by next non-alphanumeric character)
+ \L call pcre_get_substringlist() after a
+ successful match
+ \M discover the minimum MATCH_LIMIT setting
+ \N pass the PCRE_NOTEMPTY option to <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+ \Odd set the size of the output vector passed to
+ <b>pcre_exec()</b> to dd (any number of decimal
+ digits)
+ \Z pass the PCRE_NOTEOL option to <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If \M is present, <b>pcretest</b> calls <b>pcre_exec()</b> several times, with
+different values in the <i>match_limit</i> field of the <b>pcre_extra</b> data
+structure, until it finds the minimum number that is needed for
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> to complete. This number is a measure of the amount of
+recursion and backtracking that takes place, and checking it out can be
+instructive. For most simple matches, the number is quite small, but for
+patterns with very large numbers of matching possibilities, it can become large
+very quickly with increasing length of subject string.
+</P>
+<P>
+When \O is used, it may be higher or lower than the size set by the <b>-O</b>
+option (or defaulted to 45); \O applies only to the call of <b>pcre_exec()</b>
+for the line in which it appears.
+</P>
+<P>
+A backslash followed by anything else just escapes the anything else. If the
+very last character is a backslash, it is ignored. This gives a way of passing
+an empty line as data, since a real empty line terminates the data input.
+</P>
+<P>
+If <b>/P</b> was present on the regex, causing the POSIX wrapper API to be used,
+only <b>\B</b>, and <b>\Z</b> have any effect, causing REG_NOTBOL and REG_NOTEOL
+to be passed to <b>regexec()</b> respectively.
+</P>
+<P>
+The use of \x{hh...} to represent UTF-8 characters is not dependent on the use
+of the <b>/8</b> modifier on the pattern. It is recognized always. There may be
+any number of hexadecimal digits inside the braces. The result is from one to
+six bytes, encoded according to the UTF-8 rules.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">OUTPUT FROM PCRETEST</a><br>
+<P>
+When a match succeeds, pcretest outputs the list of captured substrings that
+<b>pcre_exec()</b> returns, starting with number 0 for the string that matched
+the whole pattern. Here is an example of an interactive pcretest run.
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ $ pcretest
+ PCRE version 4.00 08-Jan-2003
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ re&#62; /^abc(\d+)/
+ data&#62; abc123
+ 0: abc123
+ 1: 123
+ data&#62; xyz
+ No match
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If the strings contain any non-printing characters, they are output as \0x
+escapes, or as \x{...} escapes if the <b>/8</b> modifier was present on the
+pattern. If the pattern has the <b>/+</b> modifier, then the output for
+substring 0 is followed by the the rest of the subject string, identified by
+"0+" like this:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ re&#62; /cat/+
+ data&#62; cataract
+ 0: cat
+ 0+ aract
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+If the pattern has the <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> modifier, the results of successive
+matching attempts are output in sequence, like this:
+</P>
+<P>
+<pre>
+ re&#62; /\Bi(\w\w)/g
+ data&#62; Mississippi
+ 0: iss
+ 1: ss
+ 0: iss
+ 1: ss
+ 0: ipp
+ 1: pp
+</PRE>
+</P>
+<P>
+"No match" is output only if the first match attempt fails.
+</P>
+<P>
+If any of the sequences <b>\C</b>, <b>\G</b>, or <b>\L</b> are present in a
+data line that is successfully matched, the substrings extracted by the
+convenience functions are output with C, G, or L after the string number
+instead of a colon. This is in addition to the normal full list. The string
+length (that is, the return from the extraction function) is given in
+parentheses after each string for <b>\C</b> and <b>\G</b>.
+</P>
+<P>
+Note that while patterns can be continued over several lines (a plain "&#62;"
+prompt is used for continuations), data lines may not. However newlines can be
+included in data by means of the \n escape.
+</P>
+<br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
+<P>
+Philip Hazel &#60;ph10@cam.ac.uk&#62;
+<br>
+University Computing Service,
+<br>
+Cambridge CB2 3QG, England.
+</P>
+<P>
+Last updated: 03 February 2003
+<br>
+Copyright &copy; 1997-2003 University of Cambridge.