A new function `pcre_get_compiled_regex_cache_ex()` is introduced,
which allows to compile regexp pattern using the "C" locale instead
of a current locale.
This will be needed to replace setlocale() usage in fileinfo,
which is not thread-safe.
Print a more informative message that indicates that this is
likely a permission issue, and also indicate that pcre.jit=0
can be used to work around it.
Also automatically disable the JIT, so that this message is
only shown once.
See bug #78630.
RFC: https://wiki.php.net/rfc/tostring_exceptions
And convert some object to string conversion related recoverable
fatal errors into Error exceptions.
Improve exception safety of internal code performing string
conversions.
The `<loccale.h>` header file, setlocale, and localeconv are part of the
standard C89 [1] and on current systems can be used unconditionally.
Since PHP 7.4 requires at least C89 or greater, the `HAVE_LOCALE_H`,
`HAVE_SETLOCALE`, and `HAVE_LOCALECONV` symbols defined by Autoconf in
configure.ac [2] can be ommitted and simplifed.
The bundled libmagic (file) has also been patched already in version
5.35 and up in upstream location so when it will be patched also in
php-src the check for locale.h header is still left in the configure.ac
and in windows headers definition file.
[1] https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c89/c89-draft.html#4.4
[2] https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/autoconf.git/tree/lib/autoconf/headers.m4
Omit the bundled libmagic files
There will only be one request on the CLI SAPI, so there is no
advantage to having a persistent PCRE cache. Using a non-persistent
cache allows us to use arbitrary strings as cache keys.
Accept the two offsets directly, rather than doing length calculations
at all callsites. Also extract the logic to create a possibly interned
string.
Switch the split implementation to work on a char* subject internally,
because ZSTR_VAL(subject_str) is a mouthful...
This issue was mentioned in bug #73948. The PREG_PATTERN_ORDER
padding was performed without respecting the PREF_OFFSET_CAPTURE
flag, which resulted in unmatched subpatterns being either null or
[null, -1] depending on where they occur. Now they will always be
[null, -1], consistent with other usages.
If PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE is used, unmatched subpatterns will be either
[null, -1] or ['', -1] depending on PREG_UNMATCHED_AS_NULL mode.
Instead of creating a new array like this every time, cache it inside
a global (per-request -- could make it immutable though).
Additionally check whether the subpattern is an empty string or
single character string and use an existing interned string in that
case. Empty / single-char subpatterns are common, so let's avoid
allocating strings for them.
When used with preg_match_all or preg_replace_callback(_array),
subpattern names can be used in the matches array many times.
Switch the subpat_names table to use zend_string, so we don't have
to allocate a new string every time. Also don't bother creating the
table if no $matches were passed.
This might be a regression for the case where preg_match() is used
with many trailing named subpatterns that are skipped in the result
array, but that seems rather contrived.
We currently have a large performance problem when implementing lexers
working on UTF-8 strings in PHP. This kind of code tends to perform a
large number of matches at different offsets on a single string. This
is generally fast. However, if /u mode is used, the full string will
be UTF-8 validated on each match. This results in quadratic runtime.
This patch fixes the issue by adding a IS_STR_VALID_UTF8 flag, which
is set when we have determined that the string is valid UTF8 and
further validation is skipped.
A limitation of this approach is that we can't set the flag for interned
strings. I think this is not a problem for this use-case which will
generally work on dynamic data. If we want to use this flag for other
purposes as well (mbstring?) then it might be worthwhile to UTF-8 validate
strings during interning. But right now this doesn't seem useful.