@node Pattern Matching, I/O Overview, Searching and Sorting, Top @chapter Pattern Matching The GNU C Library provides pattern matching facilities for two kinds of patterns: regular expressions and file-name wildcards. The library also provides a facility for expanding variable and command references and parsing text into words in the way the shell does. @menu * Wildcard Matching:: Matching a wildcard pattern against a single string. * Globbing:: Finding the files that match a wildcard pattern. * Regular Expressions:: Matching regular expressions against strings. * Word Expansion:: Expanding shell variables, nested commands, arithmetic, and wildcards. This is what the shell does with shell commands. @end menu @node Wildcard Matching @section Wildcard Matching @pindex fnmatch.h This section describes how to match a wildcard pattern against a particular string. The result is a yes or no answer: does the string fit the pattern or not. The symbols described here are all declared in @file{fnmatch.h}. @comment fnmatch.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftypefun int fnmatch (const char *@var{pattern}, const char *@var{string}, int @var{flags}) This function tests whether the string @var{string} matches the pattern @var{pattern}. It returns @code{0} if they do match; otherwise, it returns the nonzero value @code{FNM_NOMATCH}. The arguments @var{pattern} and @var{string} are both strings. The argument @var{flags} is a combination of flag bits that alter the details of matching. See below for a list of the defined flags. In the GNU C Library, @code{fnmatch} cannot experience an ``error''---it always returns an answer for whether the match succeeds. However, other implementations of @code{fnmatch} might sometimes report ``errors''. They would do so by returning nonzero values that are not equal to @code{FNM_NOMATCH}. @end deftypefun These are the available flags for the @var{flags} argument: @table @code @comment fnmatch.h @comment GNU @item FNM_FILE_NAME Treat the @samp{/} character specially, for matching file names. If this flag is set, wildcard constructs in @var{pattern} cannot match @samp{/} in @var{string}. Thus, the only way to match @samp{/} is with an explicit @samp{/} in @var{pattern}. @comment fnmatch.h @comment POSIX.2 @item FNM_PATHNAME This is an alias for @code{FNM_FILE_NAME}; it comes from POSIX.2. We don't recommend this name because we don't use the term ``pathname'' for file names. @comment fnmatch.h @comment POSIX.2 @item FNM_PERIOD Treat the @samp{.} character specially if it appears at the beginning of @var{string}. If this flag is set, wildcard constructs in @var{pattern} cannot match @samp{.} as the first character of @var{string}. If you set both @code{FNM_PERIOD} and @code{FNM_FILE_NAME}, then the special treatment applies to @samp{.} following @samp{/} as well as to @samp{.} at the beginning of @var{string}. (The shell uses the @code{FNM_PERIOD} and @code{FNM_FILE_NAME} falgs together for matching file names.) @comment fnmatch.h @comment POSIX.2 @item FNM_NOESCAPE Don't treat the @samp{\} character specially in patterns. Normally, @samp{\} quotes the following character, turning off its special meaning (if any) so that it matches only itself. When quoting is enabled, the pattern @samp{\?} matches only the string @samp{?}, because the question mark in the pattern acts like an ordinary character. If you use @code{FNM_NOESCAPE}, then @samp{\} is an ordinary character. @comment fnmatch.h @comment GNU @item FNM_LEADING_DIR Ignore a trailing sequence of characters starting with a @samp{/} in @var{string}; that is to say, test whether @var{string} starts with a directory name that @var{pattern} matches. If this flag is set, either @samp{foo*} or @samp{foobar} as a pattern would match the string @samp{foobar/frobozz}. @comment fnmatch.h @comment GNU @item FNM_CASEFOLD Ignore case in comparing @var{string} to @var{pattern}. @end table @node Globbing @section Globbing @cindex globbing The archetypal use of wildcards is for matching against the files in a directory, and making a list of all the matches. This is called @dfn{globbing}. You could do this using @code{fnmatch}, by reading the directory entries one by one and testing each one with @code{fnmatch}. But that would be slow (and complex, since you would have to handle subdirectories by hand). The library provides a function @code{glob} to make this particular use of wildcards convenient. @code{glob} and the other symbols in this section are declared in @file{glob.h}. @menu * Calling Glob:: Basic use of @code{glob}. * Flags for Globbing:: Flags that enable various options in @code{glob}. @end menu @node Calling Glob @subsection Calling @code{glob} The result of globbing is a vector of file names (strings). To return this vector, @code{glob} uses a special data type, @code{glob_t}, which is a structure. You pass @code{glob} the address of the structure, and it fills in the structure's fields to tell you about the results. @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftp {Data Type} glob_t This data type holds a pointer to a word vector. More precisely, it records both the address of the word vector and its size. @table @code @item gl_pathc The number of elements in the vector. @item gl_pathv The address of the vector. This field has type @w{@code{char **}}. @item gl_offs The offset of the first real element of the vector, from its nominal address in the @code{gl_pathv} field. Unlike the other fields, this is always an input to @code{glob}, rather than an output from it. If you use a nonzero offset, then that many elements at the beginning of the vector are left empty. (The @code{glob} function fills them with null pointers.) The @code{gl_offs} field is meaningful only if you use the @code{GLOB_DOOFFS} flag. Otherwise, the offset is always zero regardless of what is in this field, and the first real element comes at the beginning of the vector. @end table @end deftp @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftypefun int glob (const char *@var{pattern}, int @var{flags}, int (*@var{errfunc}) (const char *@var{filename}, int @var{error-code}), glob_t *@var{vector-ptr}) The function @code{glob} does globbing using the pattern @var{pattern} in the current directory. It puts the result in a newly allocated vector, and stores the size and address of this vector into @code{*@var{vector-ptr}}. The argument @var{flags} is a combination of bit flags; see @ref{Flags for Globbing}, for details of the flags. The result of globbing is a sequence of file names. The function @code{glob} allocates a string for each resulting word, then allocates a vector of type @code{char **} to store the addresses of these strings. The last element of the vector is a null pointer. This vector is called the @dfn{word vector}. To return this vector, @code{glob} stores both its address and its length (number of elements, not counting the terminating null pointer) into @code{*@var{vector-ptr}}. Normally, @code{glob} sorts the file names alphabetically before returning them. You can turn this off with the flag @code{GLOB_NOSORT} if you want to get the information as fast as possible. Usually it's a good idea to let @code{glob} sort them---if you process the files in alphabetical order, the users will have a feel for the rate of progress that your application is making. If @code{glob} succeeds, it returns 0. Otherwise, it returns one of these error codes: @table @code @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_ABORTED There was an error opening a directory, and you used the flag @code{GLOB_ERR} or your specified @var{errfunc} returned a nonzero value. @iftex See below @end iftex @ifinfo @xref{Flags for Globbing}, @end ifinfo for an explanation of the @code{GLOB_ERR} flag and @var{errfunc}. @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_NOMATCH The pattern didn't match any existing files. If you use the @code{GLOB_NOCHECK} flag, then you never get this error code, because that flag tells @code{glob} to @emph{pretend} that the pattern matched at least one file. @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_NOSPACE It was impossible to allocate memory to hold the result. @end table In the event of an error, @code{glob} stores information in @code{*@var{vector-ptr}} about all the matches it has found so far. @end deftypefun @node Flags for Globbing @subsection Flags for Globbing This section describes the flags that you can specify in the @var{flags} argument to @code{glob}. Choose the flags you want, and combine them with the C bitwise OR operator @code{|}. @table @code @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_APPEND Append the words from this expansion to the vector of words produced by previous calls to @code{glob}. This way you can effectively expand several words as if they were concatenated with spaces between them. In order for appending to work, you must not modify the contents of the word vector structure between calls to @code{glob}. And, if you set @code{GLOB_DOOFFS} in the first call to @code{glob}, you must also set it when you append to the results. Note that the pointer stored in @code{gl_pathv} may no longer be valid after you call @code{glob} the second time, because @code{glob} might have relocated the vector. So always fetch @code{gl_pathv} from the @code{glob_t} structure after each @code{glob} call; @strong{never} save the pointer across calls. @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_DOOFFS Leave blank slots at the beginning of the vector of words. The @code{gl_offs} field says how many slots to leave. The blank slots contain null pointers. @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_ERR Give up right away and report an error if there is any difficulty reading the directories that must be read in order to expand @var{pattern} fully. Such difficulties might include a directory in which you don't have the requisite access. Normally, @code{glob} tries its best to keep on going despite any errors, reading whatever directories it can. You can exercise even more control than this by specifying an error-handler function @var{errfunc} when you call @code{glob}. If @var{errfunc} is not a null pointer, then @code{glob} doesn't give up right away when it can't read a directory; instead, it calls @var{errfunc} with two arguments, like this: @smallexample (*@var{errfunc}) (@var{filename}, @var{error-code}) @end smallexample @noindent The argument @var{filename} is the name of the directory that @code{glob} couldn't open or couldn't read, and @var{error-code} is the @code{errno} value that was reported to @code{glob}. If the error handler function returns nonzero, then @code{glob} gives up right away. Otherwise, it continues. @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_MARK If the pattern matches the name of a directory, append @samp{/} to the directory's name when returning it. @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_NOCHECK If the pattern doesn't match any file names, return the pattern itself as if it were a file name that had been matched. (Normally, when the pattern doesn't match anything, @code{glob} returns that there were no matches.) @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_NOSORT Don't sort the file names; return them in no particular order. (In practice, the order will depend on the order of the entries in the directory.) The only reason @emph{not} to sort is to save time. @comment glob.h @comment POSIX.2 @item GLOB_NOESCAPE Don't treat the @samp{\} character specially in patterns. Normally, @samp{\} quotes the following character, turning off its special meaning (if any) so that it matches only itself. When quoting is enabled, the pattern @samp{\?} matches only the string @samp{?}, because the question mark in the pattern acts like an ordinary character. If you use @code{GLOB_NOESCAPE}, then @samp{\} is an ordinary character. @code{glob} does its work by calling the function @code{fnmatch} repeatedly. It handles the flag @code{GLOB_NOESCAPE} by turning on the @code{FNM_NOESCAPE} flag in calls to @code{fnmatch}. @end table @node Regular Expressions @section Regular Expression Matching The GNU C library supports two interfaces for matching regular expressions. One is the standard POSIX.2 interface, and the other is what the GNU system has had for many years. Both interfaces are declared in the header file @file{regex.h}. If you define @w{@code{_POSIX_C_SOURCE}}, then only the POSIX.2 functions, structures, and constants are declared. @c !!! we only document the POSIX.2 interface here!! @menu * POSIX Regexp Compilation:: Using @code{regcomp} to prepare to match. * Flags for POSIX Regexps:: Syntax variations for @code{regcomp}. * Matching POSIX Regexps:: Using @code{regexec} to match the compiled pattern that you get from @code{regcomp}. * Regexp Subexpressions:: Finding which parts of the string were matched. * Subexpression Complications:: Find points of which parts were matched. * Regexp Cleanup:: Freeing storage; reporting errors. @end menu @node POSIX Regexp Compilation @subsection POSIX Regular Expression Compilation Before you can actually match a regular expression, you must @dfn{compile} it. This is not true compilation---it produces a special data structure, not machine instructions. But it is like ordinary compilation in that its purpose is to enable you to ``execute'' the pattern fast. (@xref{Matching POSIX Regexps}, for how to use the compiled regular expression for matching.) There is a special data type for compiled regular expressions: @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftp {Data Type} regex_t This type of object holds a compiled regular expression. It is actually a structure. It has just one field that your programs should look at: @table @code @item re_nsub This field holds the number of parenthetical subexpressions in the regular expression that was compiled. @end table There are several other fields, but we don't describe them here, because only the functions in the library should use them. @end deftp After you create a @code{regex_t} object, you can compile a regular expression into it by calling @code{regcomp}. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftypefun int regcomp (regex_t *@var{compiled}, const char *@var{pattern}, int @var{cflags}) The function @code{regcomp} ``compiles'' a regular expression into a data structure that you can use with @code{regexec} to match against a string. The compiled regular expression format is designed for efficient matching. @code{regcomp} stores it into @code{*@var{compiled}}. It's up to you to allocate an object of type @code{regex_t} and pass its address to @code{regcomp}. The argument @var{cflags} lets you specify various options that control the syntax and semantics of regular expressions. @xref{Flags for POSIX Regexps}. If you use the flag @code{REG_NOSUB}, then @code{regcomp} omits from the compiled regular expression the information necessary to record how subexpressions actually match. In this case, you might as well pass @code{0} for the @var{matchptr} and @var{nmatch} arguments when you call @code{regexec}. If you don't use @code{REG_NOSUB}, then the compiled regular expression does have the capacity to record how subexpressions match. Also, @code{regcomp} tells you how many subexpressions @var{pattern} has, by storing the number in @code{@var{compiled}->re_nsub}. You can use that value to decide how long an array to allocate to hold information about subexpression matches. @code{regcomp} returns @code{0} if it succeeds in compiling the regular expression; otherwise, it returns a nonzero error code (see the table below). You can use @code{regerror} to produce an error message string describing the reason for a nonzero value; see @ref{Regexp Cleanup}. @end deftypefun Here are the possible nonzero values that @code{regcomp} can return: @table @code @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_BADBR There was an invalid @samp{\@{@dots{}\@}} construct in the regular expression. A valid @samp{\@{@dots{}\@}} construct must contain either a single number, or two numbers in increasing order separated by a comma. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_BADPAT There was a syntax error in the regular expression. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_BADRPT A repetition operator such as @samp{?} or @samp{*} appeared in a bad position (with no preceding subexpression to act on). @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_ECOLLATE The regular expression referred to an invalid collating element (one not defined in the current locale for string collation). @xref{Locale Categories}. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_ECTYPE The regular expression referred to an invalid character class name. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_EESCAPE The regular expression ended with @samp{\}. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_ESUBREG There was an invalid number in the @samp{\@var{digit}} construct. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_EBRACK There were unbalanced square brackets in the regular expression. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_EPAREN An extended regular expression had unbalanced parentheses, or a basic regular expression had unbalanced @samp{\(} and @samp{\)}. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_EBRACE The regular expression had unbalanced @samp{\@{} and @samp{\@}}. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_ERANGE One of the endpoints in a range expression was invalid. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_ESPACE @code{regcomp} ran out of memory. @end table @node Flags for POSIX Regexps @subsection Flags for POSIX Regular Expressions These are the bit flags that you can use in the @var{cflags} operand when compiling a regular expression with @code{regcomp}. @table @code @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_EXTENDED Treat the pattern as an extended regular expression, rather than as a basic regular expression. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_ICASE Ignore case when matching letters. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_NOSUB Don't bother storing the contents of the @var{matches-ptr} array. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_NEWLINE Treat a newline in @var{string} as dividing @var{string} into multiple lines, so that @samp{$} can match before the newline and @samp{^} can match after. Also, don't permit @samp{.} to match a newline, and don't permit @samp{[^@dots{}]} to match a newline. Otherwise, newline acts like any other ordinary character. @end table @node Matching POSIX Regexps @subsection Matching a Compiled POSIX Regular Expression Once you have compiled a regular expression, as described in @ref{POSIX Regexp Compilation}, you can match it against strings using @code{regexec}. A match anywhere inside the string counts as success, unless the regular expression contains anchor characters (@samp{^} or @samp{$}). @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftypefun int regexec (regex_t *@var{compiled}, char *@var{string}, size_t @var{nmatch}, regmatch_t @var{matchptr} @t{[]}, int @var{eflags}) This function tries to match the compiled regular expression @code{*@var{compiled}} against @var{string}. @code{regexec} returns @code{0} if the regular expression matches; otherwise, it returns a nonzero value. See the table below for what nonzero values mean. You can use @code{regerror} to produce an error message string describing the reason for a nonzero value; see @ref{Regexp Cleanup}. The argument @var{eflags} is a word of bit flags that enable various options. If you want to get information about what part of @var{string} actually matched the regular expression or its subexpressions, use the arguments @var{matchptr} and @var{nmatch}. Otherwise, pass @code{0} for @var{nmatch}, and @code{NULL} for @var{matchptr}. @xref{Regexp Subexpressions}. @end deftypefun You must match the regular expression with the same set of current locales that were in effect when you compiled the regular expression. The function @code{regexec} accepts the following flags in the @var{eflags} argument: @table @code @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_NOTBOL Do not regard the beginning of the specified string as the beginning of a line; more generally, don't make any assumptions about what text might precede it. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_NOTEOL Do not regard the end of the specified string as the end of a line; more generally, don't make any assumptions about what text might follow it. @end table Here are the possible nonzero values that @code{regexec} can return: @table @code @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_NOMATCH The pattern didn't match the string. This isn't really an error. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @item REG_ESPACE @code{regexec} ran out of memory. @end table @node Regexp Subexpressions @subsection Match Results with Subexpressions When @code{regexec} matches parenthetical subexpressions of @var{pattern}, it records which parts of @var{string} they match. It returns that information by storing the offsets into an array whose elements are structures of type @code{regmatch_t}. The first element of the array (index @code{0}) records the part of the string that matched the entire regular expression. Each other element of the array records the beginning and end of the part that matched a single parenthetical subexpression. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftp {Data Type} regmatch_t This is the data type of the @var{matcharray} array that you pass to @code{regexec}. It contains two structure fields, as follows: @table @code @item rm_so The offset in @var{string} of the beginning of a substring. Add this value to @var{string} to get the address of that part. @item rm_eo The offset in @var{string} of the end of the substring. @end table @end deftp @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftp {Data Type} regoff_t @code{regoff_t} is an alias for another signed integer type. The fields of @code{regmatch_t} have type @code{regoff_t}. @end deftp The @code{regmatch_t} elements correspond to subexpressions positionally; the first element (index @code{1}) records where the first subexpression matched, the second element records the second subexpression, and so on. The order of the subexpressions is the order in which they begin. When you call @code{regexec}, you specify how long the @var{matchptr} array is, with the @var{nmatch} argument. This tells @code{regexec} how many elements to store. If the actual regular expression has more than @var{nmatch} subexpressions, then you won't get offset information about the rest of them. But this doesn't alter whether the pattern matches a particular string or not. If you don't want @code{regexec} to return any information about where the subexpressions matched, you can either supply @code{0} for @var{nmatch}, or use the flag @code{REG_NOSUB} when you compile the pattern with @code{regcomp}. @node Subexpression Complications @subsection Complications in Subexpression Matching Sometimes a subexpression matches a substring of no characters. This happens when @samp{f\(o*\)} matches the string @samp{fum}. (It really matches just the @samp{f}.) In this case, both of the offsets identify the point in the string where the null substring was found. In this example, the offsets are both @code{1}. Sometimes the entire regular expression can match without using some of its subexpressions at all---for example, when @samp{ba\(na\)*} matches the string @samp{ba}, the parenthetical subexpression is not used. When this happens, @code{regexec} stores @code{-1} in both fields of the element for that subexpression. Sometimes matching the entire regular expression can match a particular subexpression more than once---for example, when @samp{ba\(na\)*} matches the string @samp{bananana}, the parenthetical subexpression matches three times. When this happens, @code{regexec} usually stores the offsets of the last part of the string that matched the subexpression. In the case of @samp{bananana}, these offsets are @code{6} and @code{8}. But the last match is not always the one that is chosen. It's more accurate to say that the last @emph{opportunity} to match is the one that takes precedence. What this means is that when one subexpression appears within another, then the results reported for the inner subexpression reflect whatever happened on the last match of the outer subexpression. For an example, consider @samp{\(ba\(na\)*s \)*} matching the string @samp{bananas bas }. The last time the inner expression actually matches is near the end of the first word. But it is @emph{considered} again in the second word, and fails to match there. @code{regexec} reports nonuse of the ``na'' subexpression. Another place where this rule applies is when the regular expression @w{@samp{\(ba\(na\)*s \|nefer\(ti\)* \)*}} matches @samp{bananas nefertiti}. The ``na'' subexpression does match in the first word, but it doesn't match in the second word because the other alternative is used there. Once again, the second repetition of the outer subexpression overrides the first, and within that second repetition, the ``na'' subexpression is not used. So @code{regexec} reports nonuse of the ``na'' subexpression. @node Regexp Cleanup @subsection POSIX Regexp Matching Cleanup When you are finished using a compiled regular expression, you can free the storage it uses by calling @code{regfree}. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftypefun void regfree (regex_t *@var{compiled}) Calling @code{regfree} frees all the storage that @code{*@var{compiled}} points to. This includes various internal fields of the @code{regex_t} structure that aren't documented in this manual. @code{regfree} does not free the object @code{*@var{compiled}} itself. @end deftypefun You should always free the space in a @code{regex_t} structure with @code{regfree} before using the structure to compile another regular expression. When @code{regcomp} or @code{regexec} reports an error, you can use the function @code{regerror} to turn it into an error message string. @comment regex.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftypefun size_t regerror (int @var{errcode}, regex_t *@var{compiled}, char *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{length}) This function produces an error message string for the error code @var{errcode}, and stores the string in @var{length} bytes of memory starting at @var{buffer}. For the @var{compiled} argument, supply the same compiled regular expression structure that @code{regcomp} or @code{regexec} was working with when it got the error. Alternatively, you can supply @code{NULL} for @var{compiled}; you will still get a meaningful error message, but it might not be as detailed. If the error message can't fit in @var{length} bytes (including a terminating null character), then @code{regerror} truncates it. The string that @code{regerror} stores is always null-terminated even if it has been truncated. The return value of @code{regerror} is the minimum length needed to store the entire error message. If this is less than @var{length}, then the error message was not truncated, and you can use it. Otherwise, you should call @code{regerror} again with a larger buffer. Here is a function which uses @code{regerror}, but always dynamically allocates a buffer for the error message: @smallexample char *get_regerror (int errcode, regex_t *compiled) @{ size_t length = regerror (errcode, compiled, NULL, 0); char *buffer = xmalloc (length); (void) regerror (errcode, compiled, buffer, length); return buffer; @} @end smallexample @end deftypefun @c !!!! this is not actually in the library.... @node Word Expansion @section Shell-Style Word Expansion @cindex word expansion @cindex expansion of shell words @dfn{Word expansion} means the process of splitting a string into @dfn{words} and substituting for variables, commands, and wildcards just as the shell does. For example, when you write @samp{ls -l foo.c}, this string is split into three separate words---@samp{ls}, @samp{-l} and @samp{foo.c}. This is the most basic function of word expansion. When you write @samp{ls *.c}, this can become many words, because the word @samp{*.c} can be replaced with any number of file names. This is called @dfn{wildcard expansion}, and it is also a part of word expansion. When you use @samp{echo $PATH} to print your path, you are taking advantage of @dfn{variable substitution}, which is also part of word expansion. Ordinary programs can perform word expansion just like the shell by calling the library function @code{wordexp}. @menu * Expansion Stages:: What word expansion does to a string. * Calling Wordexp:: How to call @code{wordexp}. * Flags for Wordexp:: Options you can enable in @code{wordexp}. * Wordexp Example:: A sample program that does word expansion. @end menu @node Expansion Stages @subsection The Stages of Word Expansion When word expansion is applied to a sequence of words, it performs the following transformations in the order shown here: @enumerate @item @cindex tilde expansion @dfn{Tilde expansion}: Replacement of @samp{~foo} with the name of the home directory of @samp{foo}. @item Next, three different transformations are applied in the same step, from left to right: @itemize @bullet @item @cindex variable substitution @cindex substitution of variables and commands @dfn{Variable substitution}: Environment variables are substituted for references such as @samp{$foo}. @item @cindex command substitution @dfn{Command substitution}: Constructs such as @w{@samp{`cat foo`}} and the equivalent @w{@samp{$(cat foo)}} are replaced with the output from the inner command. @item @cindex arithmetic expansion @dfn{Arithmetic expansion}: Constructs such as @samp{$(($x-1))} are replaced with the result of the arithmetic computation. @end itemize @item @cindex field splitting @dfn{Field splitting}: subdivision of the text into @dfn{words}. @item @cindex wildcard expansion @dfn{Wildcard expansion}: The replacement of a construct such as @samp{*.c} with a list of @samp{.c} file names. Wildcard expansion applies to an entire word at a time, and replaces that word with 0 or more file names that are themselves words. @item @cindex quote removal @cindex removal of quotes @dfn{Quote removal}: The deletion of string-quotes, now that they have done their job by inhibiting the above transformations when appropriate. @end enumerate For the details of these transformations, and how to write the constructs that use them, see @w{@cite{The BASH Manual}} (to appear). @node Calling Wordexp @subsection Calling @code{wordexp} All the functions, constants and data types for word expansion are declared in the header file @file{wordexp.h}. Word expansion produces a vector of words (strings). To return this vector, @code{wordexp} uses a special data type, @code{wordexp_t}, which is a structure. You pass @code{wordexp} the address of the structure, and it fills in the structure's fields to tell you about the results. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftp {Data Type} {wordexp_t} This data type holds a pointer to a word vector. More precisely, it records both the address of the word vector and its size. @table @code @item we_wordc The number of elements in the vector. @item we_wordv The address of the vector. This field has type @w{@code{char **}}. @item we_offs The offset of the first real element of the vector, from its nominal address in the @code{we_wordv} field. Unlike the other fields, this is always an input to @code{wordexp}, rather than an output from it. If you use a nonzero offset, then that many elements at the beginning of the vector are left empty. (The @code{wordexp} function fills them with null pointers.) The @code{we_offs} field is meaningful only if you use the @code{WRDE_DOOFFS} flag. Otherwise, the offset is always zero regardless of what is in this field, and the first real element comes at the beginning of the vector. @end table @end deftp @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftypefun int wordexp (const char *@var{words}, wordexp_t *@var{word-vector-ptr}, int @var{flags}) Perform word expansion on the string @var{words}, putting the result in a newly allocated vector, and store the size and address of this vector into @code{*@var{word-vector-ptr}}. The argument @var{flags} is a combination of bit flags; see @ref{Flags for Wordexp}, for details of the flags. You shouldn't use any of the characters @samp{|&;<>} in the string @var{words} unless they are quoted; likewise for newline. If you use these characters unquoted, you will get the @code{WRDE_BADCHAR} error code. Don't use parentheses or braces unless they are quoted or part of a word expansion construct. If you use quotation characters @samp{'"`}, they should come in pairs that balance. The results of word expansion are a sequence of words. The function @code{wordexp} allocates a string for each resulting word, then allocates a vector of type @code{char **} to store the addresses of these strings. The last element of the vector is a null pointer. This vector is called the @dfn{word vector}. To return this vector, @code{wordexp} stores both its address and its length (number of elements, not counting the terminating null pointer) into @code{*@var{word-vector-ptr}}. If @code{wordexp} succeeds, it returns 0. Otherwise, it returns one of these error codes: @table @code @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_BADCHAR The input string @var{words} contains an unquoted invalid character such as @samp{|}. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_BADVAL The input string refers to an undefined shell variable, and you used the flag @code{WRDE_UNDEF} to forbid such references. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_CMDSUB The input string uses command substitution, and you used the flag @code{WRDE_NOCMD} to forbid command substitution. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_NOSPACE It was impossible to allocate memory to hold the result. In this case, @code{wordexp} can store part of the results---as much as it could allocate room for. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_SYNTAX There was a syntax error in the input string. For example, an unmatched quoting character is a syntax error. @end table @end deftypefun @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @deftypefun void wordfree (wordexp_t *@var{word-vector-ptr}) Free the storage used for the word-strings and vector that @code{*@var{word-vector-ptr}} points to. This does not free the structure @code{*@var{word-vector-ptr}} itself---only the other data it points to. @end deftypefun @node Flags for Wordexp @subsection Flags for Word Expansion This section describes the flags that you can specify in the @var{flags} argument to @code{wordexp}. Choose the flags you want, and combine them with the C operator @code{|}. @table @code @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_APPEND Append the words from this expansion to the vector of words produced by previous calls to @code{wordexp}. This way you can effectively expand several words as if they were concatenated with spaces between them. In order for appending to work, you must not modify the contents of the word vector structure between calls to @code{wordexp}. And, if you set @code{WRDE_DOOFFS} in the first call to @code{wordexp}, you must also set it when you append to the results. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_DOOFFS Leave blank slots at the beginning of the vector of words. The @code{we_offs} field says how many slots to leave. The blank slots contain null pointers. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_NOCMD Don't do command substitution; if the input requests command substitution, report an error. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_REUSE Reuse a word vector made by a previous call to @code{wordexp}. Instead of allocating a new vector of words, this call to @code{wordexp} will use the vector that already exists (making it larger if necessary). Note that the vector may move, so it is not safe to save an old pointer and use it again after calling @code{wordexp}. You must fetch @code{we_pathv} anew after each call. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_SHOWERR Do show any error messages printed by commands run by command substitution. More precisely, allow these commands to inherit the standard error output stream of the current process. By default, @code{wordexp} gives these commands a standard error stream that discards all output. @comment wordexp.h @comment POSIX.2 @item WRDE_UNDEF If the input refers to a shell variable that is not defined, report an error. @end table @node Wordexp Example @subsection @code{wordexp} Example Here is an example of using @code{wordexp} to expand several strings and use the results to run a shell command. It also shows the use of @code{WRDE_APPEND} to concatenate the expansions and of @code{wordfree} to free the space allocated by @code{wordexp}. @smallexample int expand_and_execute (const char *program, const char *options) @{ wordexp_t result; pid_t pid int status, i; /* @r{Expand the string for the program to run.} */ switch (wordexp (program, &result, 0)) @{ case 0: /* @r{Successful}. */ break; case WRDE_NOSPACE: /* @r{If the error was @code{WRDE_NOSPACE},} @r{then perhaps part of the result was allocated.} */ wordfree (&result); default: /* @r{Some other error.} */ return -1; @} /* @r{Expand the strings specified for the arguments.} */ for (i = 0; args[i]; i++) @{ if (wordexp (options, &result, WRDE_APPEND)) @{ wordfree (&result); return -1; @} @} pid = fork (); if (pid == 0) @{ /* @r{This is the child process. Execute the command.} */ execv (result.we_wordv[0], result.we_wordv); exit (EXIT_FAILURE); @} else if (pid < 0) /* @r{The fork failed. Report failure.} */ status = -1; else /* @r{This is the parent process. Wait for the child to complete.} */ if (waitpid (pid, &status, 0) != pid) status = -1; wordfree (&result); return status; @} @end smallexample In practice, since @code{wordexp} is executed by running a subshell, it would be faster to do this by concatenating the strings with spaces between them and running that as a shell command using @samp{sh -c}. @c No sense finishing this for here. @ignore @node Tilde Expansion @subsection Details of Tilde Expansion It's a standard part of shell syntax that you can use @samp{~} at the beginning of a file name to stand for your own home directory. You can use @samp{~@var{user}} to stand for @var{user}'s home directory. @dfn{Tilde expansion} is the process of converting these abbreviations to the directory names that they stand for. Tilde expansion applies to the @samp{~} plus all following characters up to whitespace or a slash. It takes place only at the beginning of a word, and only if none of the characters to be transformed is quoted in any way. Plain @samp{~} uses the value of the environment variable @code{HOME} as the proper home directory name. @samp{~} followed by a user name uses @code{getpwname} to look up that user in the user database, and uses whatever directory is recorded there. Thus, @samp{~} followed by your own name can give different results from plain @samp{~}, if the value of @code{HOME} is not really your home directory. @node Variable Substitution @subsection Details of Variable Substitution Part of ordinary shell syntax is the use of @samp{$@var{variable}} to substitute the value of a shell variable into a command. This is called @dfn{variable substitution}, and it is one part of doing word expansion. There are two basic ways you can write a variable reference for substitution: @table @code @item $@{@var{variable}@} If you write braces around the variable name, then it is completely unambiguous where the variable name ends. You can concatenate additional letters onto the end of the variable value by writing them immediately after the close brace. For example, @samp{$@{foo@}s} expands into @samp{tractors}. @item $@var{variable} If you do not put braces around the variable name, then the variable name consists of all the alphanumeric characters and underscores that follow the @samp{$}. The next punctuation character ends the variable name. Thus, @samp{$foo-bar} refers to the variable @code{foo} and expands into @samp{tractor-bar}. @end table When you use braces, you can also use various constructs to modify the value that is substituted, or test it in various ways. @table @code @item $@{@var{variable}:-@var{default}@} Substitute the value of @var{variable}, but if that is empty or undefined, use @var{default} instead. @item $@{@var{variable}:=@var{default}@} Substitute the value of @var{variable}, but if that is empty or undefined, use @var{default} instead and set the variable to @var{default}. @item $@{@var{variable}:?@var{message}@} If @var{variable} is defined and not empty, substitute its value. Otherwise, print @var{message} as an error message on the standard error stream, and consider word expansion a failure. @c ??? How does wordexp report such an error? @item $@{@var{variable}:+@var{replacement}@} Substitute @var{replacement}, but only if @var{variable} is defined and nonempty. Otherwise, substitute nothing for this construct. @end table @table @code @item $@{#@var{variable}@} Substitute a numeral which expresses in base ten the number of characters in the value of @var{variable}. @samp{$@{#foo@}} stands for @samp{7}, because @samp{tractor} is seven characters. @end table These variants of variable substitution let you remove part of the variable's value before substituting it. The @var{prefix} and @var{suffix} are not mere strings; they are wildcard patterns, just like the patterns that you use to match multiple file names. But in this context, they match against parts of the variable value rather than against file names. @table @code @item $@{@var{variable}%%@var{suffix}@} Substitute the value of @var{variable}, but first discard from that variable any portion at the end that matches the pattern @var{suffix}. If there is more than one alternative for how to match against @var{suffix}, this construct uses the longest possible match. Thus, @samp{$@{foo%%r*@}} substitutes @samp{t}, because the largest match for @samp{r*} at the end of @samp{tractor} is @samp{ractor}. @item $@{@var{variable}%@var{suffix}@} Substitute the value of @var{variable}, but first discard from that variable any portion at the end that matches the pattern @var{suffix}. If there is more than one alternative for how to match against @var{suffix}, this construct uses the shortest possible alternative. Thus, @samp{$@{foo%%r*@}} substitutes @samp{tracto}, because the shortest match for @samp{r*} at the end of @samp{tractor} is just @samp{r}. @item $@{@var{variable}##@var{prefix}@} Substitute the value of @var{variable}, but first discard from that variable any portion at the beginning that matches the pattern @var{prefix}. If there is more than one alternative for how to match against @var{prefix}, this construct uses the longest possible match. Thus, @samp{$@{foo%%r*@}} substitutes @samp{t}, because the largest match for @samp{r*} at the end of @samp{tractor} is @samp{ractor}. @item $@{@var{variable}#@var{prefix}@} Substitute the value of @var{variable}, but first discard from that variable any portion at the beginning that matches the pattern @var{prefix}. If there is more than one alternative for how to match against @var{prefix}, this construct uses the shortest possible alternative. Thus, @samp{$@{foo%%r*@}} substitutes @samp{tracto}, because the shortest match for @samp{r*} at the end of @samp{tractor} is just @samp{r}. @end ignore