Wildmat

Summary

wildmat is a pattern matching library developed by Rich Salz. Based on the wildcard syntax already used in the Bourne shell, wildmat provides a uniform mechanism for matching patterns across applications with simpler syntax than that typically offered by regular expressions. Patterns are implicitly anchored at the beginning and end of each string when testing for a match.

wildmat
Developer(s)Rich Salz
TypePattern matching

In June 2019, Rich Salz released the original version of the now-defunct library on GitHub under a public domain dedication.[1]

Pattern matching operations edit

There are five pattern matching operations other than a strict one-to-one match between the pattern and the source to be checked for a match.

  • Asterisk (*) to match any sequence of zero or more characters.
  • Question mark (?) to match any single character.
  • Set of specified characters. It is specified as a list of characters, or as a range of characters where the beginning and end of the range are separated by a minus (or dash) character, or as any combination of lists and ranges. The dash can also be included in the set as a character if it is the beginning or end of the set. This set is enclosed in square brackets. The close square bracket (]) may be used in a set if it is the first character in the set.
  • Negation of a set. It is specified the same way as the set with the addition of a caret character (^) at the beginning of the test string just inside the open square bracket. (NNTP specifies an alternative !. The implementation can be configured to do either.)
  • Backslash (\) character to invalidate the special meaning of the open square bracket ([), the asterisk, backslash or the question mark. Two backslashes in sequence will result in the evaluation of the backslash as a character with no special meaning.

Examples edit

  • *foo* matches string containing "foo".
  • mini* matches anything that begins with "mini" (including the string "mini" itself).
  • ???* matches any string of three and more letters.
  • [0-9a-zA-Z] matches every single alphanumeric ASCII character.
  • [^]-] matches a character other than a close square bracket or a dash.

Usage edit

wildmat is most commonly seen in NNTP implementations such as Salz's own INN, also in unrelated software such as GNU tar and Transmission. GNU tar replaced wildmat with the POSIX fnmatch glob matcher in September 1992. The early version contained a potential out-of-bound access on unclosed [.[2]

The original byte oriented wildmat implementation is unable to handle multibyte character sets, and poses problems when the text being searched may contain multiple incompatible character sets. A simplified version of wildmat oriented toward UTF-8 encoding has been developed by the IETF NNTP working group. It is a part of RFC 3977 (section 4), the 2006 standard for NNTP.

In the newer INN which supports UTF-8, a "uwildmat" was added which supports all the features of wildmat. This 2000 rewrite, performed by Russ Allbery, fixes the OOB in the original implementation. Tightly-wound C loops were written out into smaller statements.[3][4]

Rsync includes a GPLv3-licensed wildmat descendant known as wildmatch, modified by Wayne Davison. The Git version control system imports and makes use of it. It does not support UTF-8, but has the OOB fixed and has additional support for character classes and star globs (** for arbitrary-depth).[5]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Salz, Rich (25 June 2019). "wildmat: The hoary classic wildmat pattern matcher; public domain". GitHub. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  2. ^ Salz, Rich (25 June 2019). "wildmat.c". GitHub. Might not be robust in face of malformed patterns; e.g., "foo[a-" could cause a segmentation violation.
  3. ^ uwildmat(3) – Linux Library Functions Manual
  4. ^ "uwildmat.c in trunk/lib – INN". inn.eyrie.org. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  5. ^ "git/git: wildmatch.c". GitHub. 16 February 2022.

External links edit