Before now, only binary properties could be parsed. Non-binary props are
of the form "Type=Value", where "Type" may be General_Category, Script,
or Script_Extension (or their aliases). Of these, LibUnicode currently
supports General_Category, so LibRegex can parse only that type.
This changes LibRegex to parse the property escape as a Variant of
Unicode Property & General Category values. A byte code instruction is
added to perform matching based on General Category values.
This supports some binary property matching. It does not support any
properties not yet parsed by LibUnicode, nor does it support value
matching (such as Script_Extensions=Latin).
Otherwise we'd just loop trying to parse it over and over again, for
instance in `/a{/` or `/a{1,/`.
Unless we're parsing in Annex B mode, which allows `{` as a normal
ExtendedSourceCharacter.
When the Unicode flag is set, regular expressions may escape code points
by surrounding the hexadecimal code point with curly braces, e.g. \u{41}
is the character "A".
When the Unicode flag is not set, this should be considered a repetition
symbol - \u{41} is the character "u" repeated 41 times. This is left as
a TODO for now.
When the Unicode option is not set, regular expressions should match
based on code units; when it is set, they should match based on code
points. To do so, the regex parser must combine surrogate pairs when
the Unicode option is set. Further, RegexStringView needs to know if
the flag is set in order to return code point vs. code unit based
string lengths and substrings.
ECMA262 requires that the capture groups only contain the values from
the last iteration, e.g. `((c)(a)?(b))` should _not_ contain 'a' in the
second capture group when matching "cabcb".
I have no idea *why*, but this stopped working suddenly:
return { { .code_point = '-', .is_character_class = false } };
Fails with:
error: could not convert ‘{{'-', false}}’ from
‘<brace-enclosed initializer list>’ to
‘AK::Optional<regex::CharClassRangeElement>
Might be related to 66f15c2 somehow, going one past that commit makes
the build work again, however reverting the commit doesn't. Not sure
what's up with that.
Consider this patch a band-aid until we can find the reason and an
actual fix...
Compiler version:
gcc (GCC) 11.1.1 20210531 (Red Hat 11.1.1-3)
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
This only applies to the ECMA262 parser.
This behaviour is an ECMA262-specific quirk, such references always
generate zero-length matches (even on subsequent passes).
Also adds a test in LibJS's test suite.
Fixes#6039.
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.
This was done with the help of several scripts, I dump them here to
easily find them later:
awk '/#ifdef/ { print "#cmakedefine01 "$2 }' AK/Debug.h.in
for debug_macro in $(awk '/#ifdef/ { print $2 }' AK/Debug.h.in)
do
find . \( -name '*.cpp' -o -name '*.h' -o -name '*.in' \) -not -path './Toolchain/*' -not -path './Build/*' -exec sed -i -E 's/#ifdef '$debug_macro'/#if '$debug_macro'/' {} \;
done
# Remember to remove WRAPPER_GERNERATOR_DEBUG from the list.
awk '/#cmake/ { print "set("$2" ON)" }' AK/Debug.h.in