apparmor/parser/libapparmor_re
John Johansen 7f29e7edee Fix: backend processing was not treating ${} as a special pcre character
Also for characters that are not recognized as a valid escape seq
make sure that the character is emitted.

previously
  \$ resulted in \
where it should have been \$ if $ wasn't recognized

Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Steve Beattie <steve@nxnw.org>
2014-06-19 13:49:00 -07:00
..
aare_rules.cc Convert aare_rules into a class 2014-04-23 10:57:16 -07:00
aare_rules.h Convert aare_rules into a class 2014-04-23 10:57:16 -07:00
apparmor_re.h Fix dfa minimization 2014-01-09 17:06:48 -08:00
chfa.cc parser: fix compilation failure on 32 bit systems 2014-01-10 11:02:59 -08:00
chfa.h Fixes to that where dropped from the diff-encode patch 2014-01-09 17:24:40 -08:00
expr-tree.cc parser - push normalize_tree() ops into expr-tree classes 2013-11-28 00:43:35 -08:00
expr-tree.h Fix dump output of expr tree 2014-01-09 17:30:00 -08:00
flex-tables.h Add Differential State Compression to the DFA 2014-01-09 16:55:55 -08:00
hfa.cc Fixes to that where dropped from the diff-encode patch 2014-01-09 17:24:40 -08:00
hfa.h Fix dfa minimization 2014-01-09 17:06:48 -08:00
Makefile Unify escape sequence processing into a set of library fns. 2014-04-15 14:59:41 -07:00
parse.h Split out parsing and expression trees from regexp.y 2011-03-13 05:46:29 -07:00
parse.y Fix: backend processing was not treating ${} as a special pcre character 2014-06-19 13:49:00 -07:00
README Add DFA table format README. 2007-04-03 13:53:24 +00:00

Regular Expression Scanner Generator
====================================

Notes in the scanner File Format
--------------------------------

The file format used is based on the GNU flex table file format
(--tables-file option; see Table File Format in the flex info pages and
the flex sources for documentation). The magic number used in the header
is set to 0x1B5E783D insted of 0xF13C57B1 though, which is meant to
indicate that the file format logically is not the same: the YY_ID_CHK
(check) and YY_ID_DEF (default) tables are used differently.

Flex uses state compression to store only the differences between states
for states that are similar. The amount of compresion influences the parse
speed.

The following two states could be stored as in the tables outlined
below:

States and transitions on specific characters to next states
------------------------------------------------------------
 1: ('a' => 2, 'b' => 3, 'c' => 4)
 2: ('a' => 2, 'b' => 3, 'd' => 5)

Flex-like table format
----------------------
index: (default, base)
    0: (      0,    0)  <== dummy state (nonmatching)
    1: (      0,    0)
    2: (      1,  256)

  index: (next, check)
      0: (   0,     0)  <== unused entry
	 (   0,     1)  <== ord('a') identical entries
  0+'a': (   2,     1)
  0+'b': (   3,     1)
  0+'c': (   4,     1)
	 (   0,     1)  <== (255 - ord('c')) identical entries
256+'c': (   0,     2)
256+'d': (   5,     2)

Here, state 2 is described as ('c' => 0, 'd' => 5), and everything else
as in state 1. The matching algorithm is as follows.

Flex-like scanner algorithm
---------------------------
  /* current state is in <state>, input character <c> */
  while (check[base[state] + c] != state)
    state = default[state];
  state = next[state];
  /* continue with the next input character */

This state compression algorithm performs well, except when there are
many inverted or wildcard matches ("[^x]", "."). Each input character
may cause several iterations in the while loop.


We will have many inverted character classes ("[^/]") that wouldn't
compress very well. Therefore, the regexp matcher uses no state
compression, and uses the check and default tables differently. The
above states could be stored as follows:

Regexp table format
-------------------

index: (default, base)
    0: (      0,    0)  <== dummy state (nonmatching)
    1: (      0,    0)
    2: (      1,    3)

  index: (next, check)
      0: (   0,     0)  <== unused entry
	 (   0,     0)  <== ord('a') identical, unused entries
  0+'a': (   2,     1)
  0+'b': (   3,     1)
  0+'c': (   4,     1)
  3+'a': (   2,     2)
  3+'b': (   3,     2)
  3+'c': (   0,     0)  <== entry is unused
  3+'d': (   5,     2)
	 (   0,     0)  <== (255 - ord('d')) identical, unused entries

All the entries with 0 in check (except the first entry, which is
deliberately reserved) are still available for other states that
fit in there.

Regexp scanner algorithm
------------------------
  /* current state is in <state>, matching character <c> */
  if (check[base[state] + c] == state)
    state = next[state];
  else
    state = default[state];
  /* continue with the next input character */

This representation and algorithm allows states which match more
characters than they do not match to be represented as their inverse. 
For example, a third state that accepts everything other than 'a' can
be added to the tables as one entry in (default, base) and one entry in
(next, check):

State
-----
 3: ('a' => 0, everything else => 5)

Regexp tables
-------------
index: (default, base)
    0: (      0,    0)  <== dummy state (nonmatching)
    1: (      0,    0)
    2: (      1,    3)
    3: (      5,    7)

  index: (next, check)
      0: (   0,     0)  <== unused entry
	 (   0,     0)  <== ord('a') identical, unused entries
  0+'a': (   2,     1)
  0+'b': (   3,     1)
  0+'c': (   4,     1)
  3+'a': (   2,     2)
  3+'b': (   3,     2)
  3+'c': (   0,     0)  <== entry is unused
  3+'d': (   5,     2)
  7+'a': (   0,     3)
	 (   0,     0)  <== (255 - ord('a')) identical, unused entries

While the current code does not implement any form of state compression,
the flex state compression representation could be combined by
remembering (in a bit per state, for example) which default entries
refer to inverted matches, and which refer to parent states.