[Pcre-svn] [967] code/trunk: Upgrade perltest.sh to support …

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Oggetto: [Pcre-svn] [967] code/trunk: Upgrade perltest.sh to support (some) #pattern modifiers.
Revision: 967
          http://www.exim.org/viewvc/pcre2?view=rev&revision=967
Author:   ph10
Date:     2018-07-17 17:00:09 +0100 (Tue, 17 Jul 2018)
Log Message:
-----------
Upgrade perltest.sh to support (some) #pattern modifiers.


Modified Paths:
--------------
    code/trunk/ChangeLog
    code/trunk/doc/html/pcre2test.html
    code/trunk/doc/pcre2test.1
    code/trunk/doc/pcre2test.txt
    code/trunk/perltest.sh


Modified: code/trunk/ChangeLog
===================================================================
--- code/trunk/ChangeLog    2018-07-16 16:09:34 UTC (rev 966)
+++ code/trunk/ChangeLog    2018-07-17 16:00:09 UTC (rev 967)
@@ -117,6 +117,11 @@
 backtrack into the first of the atomic groups. A complicated example is
 /(?>a(*:1))(?>b)(*SKIP:1)x|.*/ matched against "abc", where the *SKIP 
 shouldn't find a MARK (because is in an atomic group), but it did.
+
+26. Upgraded the perltest.sh script: (1) #pattern lines can now be used to set
+certain modifiers that the script recognizes; (2) Unsupported #command lines
+give a warning when they are ignored; (3) Mark data is output only if the
+"mark" modifier is present.



Version 10.31 12-February-2018

Modified: code/trunk/doc/html/pcre2test.html
===================================================================
--- code/trunk/doc/html/pcre2test.html    2018-07-16 16:09:34 UTC (rev 966)
+++ code/trunk/doc/html/pcre2test.html    2018-07-17 16:00:09 UTC (rev 967)
@@ -315,7 +315,8 @@
 test data, command lines that begin with # may appear. This file format, with
 some restrictions, can also be processed by the <b>perltest.sh</b> script that
 is distributed with PCRE2 as a means of checking that the behaviour of PCRE2
-and Perl is the same.
+and Perl is the same. For a specification of <b>perltest.sh</b>, see the 
+comments near its beginning. 
 </P>
 <P>
 When the input is a terminal, <b>pcre2test</b> prompts for each line of input,
@@ -2002,7 +2003,7 @@
 </P>
 <br><a name="SEC21" href="#TOC1">REVISION</a><br>
 <P>
-Last updated: 27 June 2018
+Last updated: 16 July 2018
 <br>
 Copyright &copy; 1997-2018 University of Cambridge.
 <br>


Modified: code/trunk/doc/pcre2test.1
===================================================================
--- code/trunk/doc/pcre2test.1    2018-07-16 16:09:34 UTC (rev 966)
+++ code/trunk/doc/pcre2test.1    2018-07-17 16:00:09 UTC (rev 967)
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-.TH PCRE2TEST 1 "27 June 2018" "PCRE 10.32"
+.TH PCRE2TEST 1 "16 July 2018" "PCRE 10.32"
 .SH NAME
 pcre2test - a program for testing Perl-compatible regular expressions.
 .SH SYNOPSIS
@@ -266,7 +266,8 @@
 test data, command lines that begin with # may appear. This file format, with
 some restrictions, can also be processed by the \fBperltest.sh\fP script that
 is distributed with PCRE2 as a means of checking that the behaviour of PCRE2
-and Perl is the same.
+and Perl is the same. For a specification of \fBperltest.sh\fP, see the 
+comments near its beginning. 
 .P
 When the input is a terminal, \fBpcre2test\fP prompts for each line of input,
 using "re>" to prompt for regular expression patterns, and "data>" to prompt
@@ -1980,6 +1981,6 @@
 .rs
 .sp
 .nf
-Last updated: 27 June 2018
+Last updated: 16 July 2018
 Copyright (c) 1997-2018 University of Cambridge.
 .fi


Modified: code/trunk/doc/pcre2test.txt
===================================================================
--- code/trunk/doc/pcre2test.txt    2018-07-16 16:09:34 UTC (rev 966)
+++ code/trunk/doc/pcre2test.txt    2018-07-17 16:00:09 UTC (rev 967)
@@ -251,121 +251,122 @@
        tern. In between sets of test data, command lines that begin with # may
        appear. This file format, with some restrictions, can also be processed
        by  the perltest.sh script that is distributed with PCRE2 as a means of
-       checking that the behaviour of PCRE2 and Perl is the same.
+       checking that the behaviour of PCRE2 and Perl is the same. For a speci-
+       fication of perltest.sh, see the comments near its beginning.


        When the input is a terminal, pcre2test prompts for each line of input,
-       using  "re>"  to prompt for regular expression patterns, and "data>" to
-       prompt for subject lines. Command lines starting with # can be  entered
+       using "re>" to prompt for regular expression patterns, and  "data>"  to
+       prompt  for subject lines. Command lines starting with # can be entered
        only in response to the "re>" prompt.


-       Each  subject line is matched separately and independently. If you want
+       Each subject line is matched separately and independently. If you  want
        to do multi-line matches, you have to use the \n escape sequence (or \r
-       or  \r\n,  etc.,  depending on the newline setting) in a single line of
-       input to encode the newline sequences. There is no limit on the  length
-       of  subject  lines; the input buffer is automatically extended if it is
-       too small. There are replication features that  makes  it  possible  to
-       generate  long  repetitive  pattern  or subject lines without having to
+       or \r\n, etc., depending on the newline setting) in a  single  line  of
+       input  to encode the newline sequences. There is no limit on the length
+       of subject lines; the input buffer is automatically extended if  it  is
+       too  small.  There  are  replication features that makes it possible to
+       generate long repetitive pattern or subject  lines  without  having  to
        supply them explicitly.


-       An empty line or the end of the file signals the  end  of  the  subject
-       lines  for  a  test,  at  which  point a new pattern or command line is
+       An  empty  line  or  the end of the file signals the end of the subject
+       lines for a test, at which point a  new  pattern  or  command  line  is
        expected if there is still input to be read.



COMMAND LINES

-       In between sets of test data, a line that begins with # is  interpreted
+       In  between sets of test data, a line that begins with # is interpreted
        as a command line. If the first character is followed by white space or
-       an exclamation mark, the line is treated as  a  comment,  and  ignored.
+       an  exclamation  mark,  the  line is treated as a comment, and ignored.
        Otherwise, the following commands are recognized:


          #forbid_utf


-       Subsequent   patterns   automatically   have  the  PCRE2_NEVER_UTF  and
-       PCRE2_NEVER_UCP options set, which locks out the use of  the  PCRE2_UTF
-       and  PCRE2_UCP options and the use of (*UTF) and (*UCP) at the start of
-       patterns. This command also forces an error  if  a  subsequent  pattern
-       contains  any  occurrences  of \P, \p, or \X, which are still supported
-       when PCRE2_UTF is not set, but which require Unicode  property  support
+       Subsequent  patterns  automatically  have   the   PCRE2_NEVER_UTF   and
+       PCRE2_NEVER_UCP  options  set, which locks out the use of the PCRE2_UTF
+       and PCRE2_UCP options and the use of (*UTF) and (*UCP) at the start  of
+       patterns.  This  command  also  forces an error if a subsequent pattern
+       contains any occurrences of \P, \p, or \X, which  are  still  supported
+       when  PCRE2_UTF  is not set, but which require Unicode property support
        to be included in the library.


-       This  is  a trigger guard that is used in test files to ensure that UTF
-       or Unicode property tests are not accidentally added to files that  are
-       used  when  Unicode  support  is  not  included in the library. Setting
-       PCRE2_NEVER_UTF and PCRE2_NEVER_UCP as a default can also  be  obtained
-       by  the  use  of #pattern; the difference is that #forbid_utf cannot be
-       unset, and the automatic options are not displayed in pattern  informa-
+       This is a trigger guard that is used in test files to ensure  that  UTF
+       or  Unicode property tests are not accidentally added to files that are
+       used when Unicode support is  not  included  in  the  library.  Setting
+       PCRE2_NEVER_UTF  and  PCRE2_NEVER_UCP as a default can also be obtained
+       by the use of #pattern; the difference is that  #forbid_utf  cannot  be
+       unset,  and the automatic options are not displayed in pattern informa-
        tion, to avoid cluttering up test output.


          #load <filename>


        This command is used to load a set of precompiled patterns from a file,
-       as described in the section entitled  "Saving  and  restoring  compiled
+       as  described  in  the  section entitled "Saving and restoring compiled
        patterns" below.


          #newline_default [<newline-list>]


-       When  PCRE2  is  built,  a default newline convention can be specified.
-       This determines which characters and/or character pairs are  recognized
+       When PCRE2 is built, a default newline  convention  can  be  specified.
+       This  determines which characters and/or character pairs are recognized
        as indicating a newline in a pattern or subject string. The default can
-       be overridden when a pattern is compiled. The standard test files  con-
-       tain  tests  of  various  newline  conventions, but the majority of the
-       tests expect a single  linefeed  to  be  recognized  as  a  newline  by
+       be  overridden when a pattern is compiled. The standard test files con-
+       tain tests of various newline conventions,  but  the  majority  of  the
+       tests  expect  a  single  linefeed  to  be  recognized  as a newline by
        default. Without special action the tests would fail when PCRE2 is com-
        piled with either CR or CRLF as the default newline.


        The #newline_default command specifies a list of newline types that are
-       acceptable  as the default. The types must be one of CR, LF, CRLF, ANY-
+       acceptable as the default. The types must be one of CR, LF, CRLF,  ANY-
        CRLF, ANY, or NUL (in upper or lower case), for example:


          #newline_default LF Any anyCRLF


        If the default newline is in the list, this command has no effect. Oth-
-       erwise,  except  when  testing  the  POSIX API, a newline modifier that
-       specifies the first newline convention in the list  (LF  in  the  above
-       example)  is  added to any pattern that does not already have a newline
+       erwise, except when testing the POSIX  API,  a  newline  modifier  that
+       specifies  the  first  newline  convention in the list (LF in the above
+       example) is added to any pattern that does not already have  a  newline
        modifier. If the newline list is empty, the feature is turned off. This
        command is present in a number of the standard test input files.


-       When  the  POSIX  API  is  being tested there is no way to override the
-       default newline convention, though it is possible to  set  the  newline
-       convention  from within the pattern. A warning is given if the posix or
-       posix_nosub modifier is used when #newline_default would set a  default
+       When the POSIX API is being tested there is  no  way  to  override  the
+       default  newline  convention,  though it is possible to set the newline
+       convention from within the pattern. A warning is given if the posix  or
+       posix_nosub  modifier is used when #newline_default would set a default
        for the non-POSIX API.


          #pattern <modifier-list>


-       This  command  sets  a default modifier list that applies to all subse-
+       This command sets a default modifier list that applies  to  all  subse-
        quent patterns. Modifiers on a pattern can change these settings.


          #perltest


-       The appearance of this line causes all subsequent modifier settings  to
+       The  appearance of this line causes all subsequent modifier settings to
        be checked for compatibility with the perltest.sh script, which is used
-       to confirm that Perl gives the same results as PCRE2. Also, apart  from
-       comment  lines,  none of the other command lines are permitted, because
-       they and many of the modifiers are specific to  pcre2test,  and  should
-       not  be  used in test files that are also processed by perltest.sh. The
-       #perltest command helps detect tests that are accidentally put  in  the
+       to  confirm that Perl gives the same results as PCRE2. Also, apart from
+       comment lines, none of the other command lines are  permitted,  because
+       they  and  many  of the modifiers are specific to pcre2test, and should
+       not be used in test files that are also processed by  perltest.sh.  The
+       #perltest  command  helps detect tests that are accidentally put in the
        wrong file.


          #pop [<modifiers>]
          #popcopy [<modifiers>]


-       These  commands  are used to manipulate the stack of compiled patterns,
-       as described in the section entitled  "Saving  and  restoring  compiled
+       These commands are used to manipulate the stack of  compiled  patterns,
+       as  described  in  the  section entitled "Saving and restoring compiled
        patterns" below.


          #save <filename>


-       This  command  is used to save a set of compiled patterns to a file, as
-       described in the section entitled "Saving and restoring  compiled  pat-
+       This command is used to save a set of compiled patterns to a  file,  as
+       described  in  the section entitled "Saving and restoring compiled pat-
        terns" below.


          #subject <modifier-list>


-       This  command  sets  a default modifier list that applies to all subse-
-       quent subject lines. Modifiers on a subject line can change these  set-
+       This command sets a default modifier list that applies  to  all  subse-
+       quent  subject lines. Modifiers on a subject line can change these set-
        tings.



@@ -373,58 +374,58 @@

        Modifier lists are used with both pattern and subject lines. Items in a
        list are separated by commas followed by optional white space. Trailing
-       whitespace  in  a modifier list is ignored. Some modifiers may be given
-       for both patterns and subject lines, whereas others are valid only  for
+       whitespace in a modifier list is ignored. Some modifiers may  be  given
+       for  both patterns and subject lines, whereas others are valid only for
        one  or  the  other.  Each  modifier  has  a  long  name,  for  example
-       "anchored", and some of them must be followed by an equals sign  and  a
-       value,  for  example,  "offset=12". Values cannot contain comma charac-
-       ters, but may contain spaces. Modifiers that do not take values may  be
+       "anchored",  and  some of them must be followed by an equals sign and a
+       value, for example, "offset=12". Values cannot  contain  comma  charac-
+       ters,  but may contain spaces. Modifiers that do not take values may be
        preceded by a minus sign to turn off a previous setting.


        A few of the more common modifiers can also be specified as single let-
-       ters, for example "i" for "caseless". In documentation,  following  the
+       ters,  for  example "i" for "caseless". In documentation, following the
        Perl convention, these are written with a slash ("the /i modifier") for
-       clarity. Abbreviated modifiers must all be concatenated  in  the  first
-       item  of a modifier list. If the first item is not recognized as a long
-       modifier name, it is interpreted as a sequence of these  abbreviations.
+       clarity.  Abbreviated  modifiers  must all be concatenated in the first
+       item of a modifier list. If the first item is not recognized as a  long
+       modifier  name, it is interpreted as a sequence of these abbreviations.
        For example:


          /abc/ig,newline=cr,jit=3


-       This  is  a pattern line whose modifier list starts with two one-letter
-       modifiers (/i and /g). The lower-case  abbreviated  modifiers  are  the
+       This is a pattern line whose modifier list starts with  two  one-letter
+       modifiers  (/i  and  /g).  The lower-case abbreviated modifiers are the
        same as used in Perl.



PATTERN SYNTAX

-       A  pattern line must start with one of the following characters (common
+       A pattern line must start with one of the following characters  (common
        symbols, excluding pattern meta-characters):


          / ! " ' ` - = _ : ; , % & @ ~


-       This is interpreted as the pattern's delimiter.  A  regular  expression
-       may  be  continued  over several input lines, in which case the newline
+       This  is  interpreted  as the pattern's delimiter. A regular expression
+       may be continued over several input lines, in which  case  the  newline
        characters are included within it. It is possible to include the delim-
        iter within the pattern by escaping it with a backslash, for example


          /abc\/def/


-       If  you do this, the escape and the delimiter form part of the pattern,
+       If you do this, the escape and the delimiter form part of the  pattern,
        but since the delimiters are all non-alphanumeric, this does not affect
-       its  interpretation.  If  the terminating delimiter is immediately fol-
+       its interpretation. If the terminating delimiter  is  immediately  fol-
        lowed by a backslash, for example,


          /abc/\


-       then a backslash is added to the end of the pattern. This  is  done  to
-       provide  a  way of testing the error condition that arises if a pattern
+       then  a  backslash  is added to the end of the pattern. This is done to
+       provide a way of testing the error condition that arises if  a  pattern
        finishes with a backslash, because


          /abc\/


-       is interpreted as the first line of a pattern that starts with  "abc/",
-       causing  pcre2test to read the next line as a continuation of the regu-
+       is  interpreted as the first line of a pattern that starts with "abc/",
+       causing pcre2test to read the next line as a continuation of the  regu-
        lar expression.


        A pattern can be followed by a modifier list (details below).
@@ -432,7 +433,7 @@


SUBJECT LINE SYNTAX

-       Before   each   subject   line   is   passed   to   pcre2_match()    or
+       Before    each   subject   line   is   passed   to   pcre2_match()   or
        pcre2_dfa_match(), leading and trailing white space is removed, and the
        line is scanned for backslash escapes, unless the subject_literal modi-
        fier was set for the pattern. The following provide a means of encoding
@@ -453,15 +454,15 @@
          \x{hh...}  hexadecimal character (any number of hex digits)


        The use of \x{hh...} is not dependent on the use of the utf modifier on
-       the  pattern. It is recognized always. There may be any number of hexa-
-       decimal digits inside the braces; invalid  values  provoke  error  mes-
+       the pattern. It is recognized always. There may be any number of  hexa-
+       decimal  digits  inside  the  braces; invalid values provoke error mes-
        sages.


-       Note  that  \xhh  specifies one byte rather than one character in UTF-8
-       mode; this makes it possible to construct invalid UTF-8  sequences  for
-       testing  purposes.  On the other hand, \x{hh} is interpreted as a UTF-8
-       character in UTF-8 mode, generating more than one byte if the value  is
-       greater  than  127.   When testing the 8-bit library not in UTF-8 mode,
+       Note that \xhh specifies one byte rather than one  character  in  UTF-8
+       mode;  this  makes it possible to construct invalid UTF-8 sequences for
+       testing purposes. On the other hand, \x{hh} is interpreted as  a  UTF-8
+       character  in UTF-8 mode, generating more than one byte if the value is
+       greater than 127.  When testing the 8-bit library not  in  UTF-8  mode,
        \x{hh} generates one byte for values less than 256, and causes an error
        for greater values.


@@ -468,8 +469,8 @@
        In UTF-16 mode, all 4-digit \x{hhhh} values are accepted. This makes it
        possible to construct invalid UTF-16 sequences for testing purposes.


-       In UTF-32 mode, all 4- to 8-digit \x{...}  values  are  accepted.  This
-       makes  it  possible  to  construct invalid UTF-32 sequences for testing
+       In  UTF-32  mode,  all  4- to 8-digit \x{...} values are accepted. This
+       makes it possible to construct invalid  UTF-32  sequences  for  testing
        purposes.


        There is a special backslash sequence that specifies replication of one
@@ -477,31 +478,31 @@


          \[<characters>]{<count>}


-       This  makes  it possible to test long strings without having to provide
+       This makes it possible to test long strings without having  to  provide
        them as part of the file. For example:


          \[abc]{4}


-       is converted to "abcabcabcabc". This feature does not support  nesting.
+       is  converted to "abcabcabcabc". This feature does not support nesting.
        To include a closing square bracket in the characters, code it as \x5D.


-       A  backslash  followed  by  an equals sign marks the end of the subject
+       A backslash followed by an equals sign marks the  end  of  the  subject
        string and the start of a modifier list. For example:


          abc\=notbol,notempty


-       If the subject string is empty and \= is followed  by  whitespace,  the
-       line  is  treated  as a comment line, and is not used for matching. For
+       If  the  subject  string is empty and \= is followed by whitespace, the
+       line is treated as a comment line, and is not used  for  matching.  For
        example:


          \= This is a comment.
          abc\= This is an invalid modifier list.


-       A backslash followed  by  any  other  non-alphanumeric  character  just
+       A  backslash  followed  by  any  other  non-alphanumeric character just
        escapes that character. A backslash followed by anything else causes an
-       error. However, if the very last character in the line is  a  backslash
-       (and  there  is  no  modifier list), it is ignored. This gives a way of
-       passing an empty line as data, since a real empty line  terminates  the
+       error.  However,  if the very last character in the line is a backslash
+       (and there is no modifier list), it is ignored. This  gives  a  way  of
+       passing  an  empty line as data, since a real empty line terminates the
        data input.


        If the subject_literal modifier is set for a pattern, all subject lines
@@ -512,22 +513,22 @@


PATTERN MODIFIERS

-       There are several types of modifier that can appear in  pattern  lines.
+       There  are  several types of modifier that can appear in pattern lines.
        Except where noted below, they may also be used in #pattern commands. A
-       pattern's modifier list can add to or override default  modifiers  that
+       pattern's  modifier  list can add to or override default modifiers that
        were set by a previous #pattern command.


    Setting compilation options


-       The  following  modifiers set options for pcre2_compile(). Most of them
-       set bits in the options argument of  that  function,  but  those  whose
+       The following modifiers set options for pcre2_compile(). Most  of  them
+       set  bits  in  the  options  argument of that function, but those whose
        names start with PCRE2_EXTRA are additional options that are set in the
-       compile context. For the main options,  there  are  some  single-letter
-       abbreviations  that are the same as Perl options. There is special han-
-       dling for /x: if a second x is  present,  PCRE2_EXTENDED  is  converted
-       into   PCRE2_EXTENDED_MORE   as   in  Perl.  A  third  appearance  adds
-       PCRE2_EXTENDED as well, though this makes  no  difference  to  the  way
-       pcre2_compile()  behaves. See pcre2api for a description of the effects
+       compile  context.  For  the  main options, there are some single-letter
+       abbreviations that are the same as Perl options. There is special  han-
+       dling  for  /x:  if  a second x is present, PCRE2_EXTENDED is converted
+       into  PCRE2_EXTENDED_MORE  as  in  Perl.  A   third   appearance   adds
+       PCRE2_EXTENDED  as  well,  though  this  makes no difference to the way
+       pcre2_compile() behaves. See pcre2api for a description of the  effects
        of these options.


              allow_empty_class         set PCRE2_ALLOW_EMPTY_CLASS
@@ -565,16 +566,16 @@
              utf                       set PCRE2_UTF


        As well as turning on the PCRE2_UTF option, the utf modifier causes all
-       non-printing  characters  in  output  strings  to  be printed using the
-       \x{hh...} notation. Otherwise, those less than 0x100 are output in  hex
-       without  the  curly brackets. Setting utf in 16-bit or 32-bit mode also
-       causes pattern and subject  strings  to  be  translated  to  UTF-16  or
+       non-printing characters in output  strings  to  be  printed  using  the
+       \x{hh...}  notation. Otherwise, those less than 0x100 are output in hex
+       without the curly brackets. Setting utf in 16-bit or 32-bit  mode  also
+       causes  pattern  and  subject  strings  to  be  translated to UTF-16 or
        UTF-32, respectively, before being passed to library functions.


    Setting compilation controls


-       The  following  modifiers  affect  the  compilation  process or request
-       information about the pattern. There  are  single-letter  abbreviations
+       The following modifiers  affect  the  compilation  process  or  request
+       information  about  the  pattern. There are single-letter abbreviations
        for some that are heavily used in the test files.


              bsr=[anycrlf|unicode]     specify \R handling
@@ -612,35 +613,35 @@


    Newline and \R handling


-       The  bsr modifier specifies what \R in a pattern should match. If it is
-       set to "anycrlf", \R matches CR, LF, or CRLF only.  If  it  is  set  to
-       "unicode",  \R matches any Unicode newline sequence. The default can be
+       The bsr modifier specifies what \R in a pattern should match. If it  is
+       set  to  "anycrlf",  \R  matches  CR, LF, or CRLF only. If it is set to
+       "unicode", \R matches any Unicode newline sequence. The default can  be
        specified when PCRE2 is built; if it is not, the default is set to Uni-
        code.


-       The  newline  modifier specifies which characters are to be interpreted
+       The newline modifier specifies which characters are to  be  interpreted
        as newlines, both in the pattern and in subject lines. The type must be
        one of CR, LF, CRLF, ANYCRLF, ANY, or NUL (in upper or lower case).


    Information about a pattern


-       The  debug modifier is a shorthand for info,fullbincode, requesting all
+       The debug modifier is a shorthand for info,fullbincode, requesting  all
        available information.


        The bincode modifier causes a representation of the compiled code to be
-       output  after compilation. This information does not contain length and
+       output after compilation. This information does not contain length  and
        offset values, which ensures that the same output is generated for dif-
-       ferent  internal  link  sizes  and different code unit widths. By using
-       bincode, the same regression tests can be used  in  different  environ-
+       ferent internal link sizes and different code  unit  widths.  By  using
+       bincode,  the  same  regression tests can be used in different environ-
        ments.


-       The  fullbincode  modifier, by contrast, does include length and offset
-       values. This is used in a few special tests that run only for  specific
+       The fullbincode modifier, by contrast, does include length  and  offset
+       values.  This is used in a few special tests that run only for specific
        code unit widths and link sizes, and is also useful for one-off tests.


-       The  info  modifier  requests  information  about  the compiled pattern
-       (whether it is anchored, has a fixed first character, and so  on).  The
-       information  is  obtained  from the pcre2_pattern_info() function. Here
+       The info modifier  requests  information  about  the  compiled  pattern
+       (whether  it  is anchored, has a fixed first character, and so on). The
+       information is obtained from the  pcre2_pattern_info()  function.  Here
        are some typical examples:


            re> /(?i)(^a|^b)/m,info
@@ -658,21 +659,21 @@
          Last code unit = 'c' (caseless)
          Subject length lower bound = 3


-       "Compile options" are those specified by modifiers;  "overall  options"
-       have  added options that are taken or deduced from the pattern. If both
-       sets of options are the same, just a single "options" line  is  output;
-       if  there  are  no  options,  the line is omitted. "First code unit" is
-       where any match must start; if there is more than one they  are  listed
-       as  "starting  code  units".  "Last code unit" is the last literal code
-       unit that must be present in any match. This  is  not  necessarily  the
-       last  character.  These lines are omitted if no starting or ending code
+       "Compile  options"  are those specified by modifiers; "overall options"
+       have added options that are taken or deduced from the pattern. If  both
+       sets  of  options are the same, just a single "options" line is output;
+       if there are no options, the line is  omitted.  "First  code  unit"  is
+       where  any  match must start; if there is more than one they are listed
+       as "starting code units". "Last code unit" is  the  last  literal  code
+       unit  that  must  be  present in any match. This is not necessarily the
+       last character. These lines are omitted if no starting or  ending  code
        units are recorded.


-       The framesize modifier shows the size, in bytes, of the storage  frames
-       used  by  pcre2_match()  for handling backtracking. The size depends on
+       The  framesize modifier shows the size, in bytes, of the storage frames
+       used by pcre2_match() for handling backtracking. The  size  depends  on
        the number of capturing parentheses in the pattern.


-       The callout_info modifier requests information about all  the  callouts
+       The  callout_info  modifier requests information about all the callouts
        in the pattern. A list of them is output at the end of any other infor-
        mation that is requested. For each callout, either its number or string
        is given, followed by the item that follows it in the pattern.
@@ -679,60 +680,60 @@


    Passing a NULL context


-       Normally,  pcre2test  passes a context block to pcre2_compile(). If the
-       null_context modifier is set, however, NULL  is  passed.  This  is  for
-       testing  that  pcre2_compile()  behaves correctly in this case (it uses
+       Normally, pcre2test passes a context block to pcre2_compile().  If  the
+       null_context  modifier  is  set,  however,  NULL is passed. This is for
+       testing that pcre2_compile() behaves correctly in this  case  (it  uses
        default values).


    Specifying pattern characters in hexadecimal


-       The hex modifier specifies that the characters of the  pattern,  except
-       for  substrings  enclosed  in single or double quotes, are to be inter-
-       preted as pairs of hexadecimal digits. This feature is  provided  as  a
+       The  hex  modifier specifies that the characters of the pattern, except
+       for substrings enclosed in single or double quotes, are  to  be  inter-
+       preted  as  pairs  of hexadecimal digits. This feature is provided as a
        way of creating patterns that contain binary zeros and other non-print-
-       ing characters. White space is permitted between pairs of  digits.  For
+       ing  characters.  White space is permitted between pairs of digits. For
        example, this pattern contains three characters:


          /ab 32 59/hex


-       Parts  of  such  a  pattern are taken literally if quoted. This pattern
-       contains nine characters, only two of which are specified in  hexadeci-
+       Parts of such a pattern are taken literally  if  quoted.  This  pattern
+       contains  nine characters, only two of which are specified in hexadeci-
        mal:


          /ab "literal" 32/hex


-       Either  single or double quotes may be used. There is no way of includ-
-       ing the delimiter within a substring. The hex and expand modifiers  are
+       Either single or double quotes may be used. There is no way of  includ-
+       ing  the delimiter within a substring. The hex and expand modifiers are
        mutually exclusive.


    Specifying the pattern's length


        By default, patterns are passed to the compiling functions as zero-ter-
-       minated strings but can be passed by length instead of being  zero-ter-
-       minated.  The use_length modifier causes this to happen. Using a length
-       happens automatically (whether or not use_length is set)  when  hex  is
-       set,  because  patterns  specified  in  hexadecimal  may contain binary
+       minated  strings but can be passed by length instead of being zero-ter-
+       minated. The use_length modifier causes this to happen. Using a  length
+       happens  automatically  (whether  or not use_length is set) when hex is
+       set, because patterns  specified  in  hexadecimal  may  contain  binary
        zeros.


        If hex or use_length is used with the POSIX wrapper API (see "Using the
-       POSIX  wrapper  API" below), the REG_PEND extension is used to pass the
+       POSIX wrapper API" below), the REG_PEND extension is used to  pass  the
        pattern's length.


    Specifying wide characters in 16-bit and 32-bit modes


        In 16-bit and 32-bit modes, all input is automatically treated as UTF-8
-       and  translated  to  UTF-16 or UTF-32 when the utf modifier is set. For
+       and translated to UTF-16 or UTF-32 when the utf modifier  is  set.  For
        testing the 16-bit and 32-bit libraries in non-UTF mode, the utf8_input
-       modifier  can  be  used. It is mutually exclusive with utf. Input lines
+       modifier can be used. It is mutually exclusive with  utf.  Input  lines
        are interpreted as UTF-8 as a means of specifying wide characters. More
        details are given in "Input encoding" above.


    Generating long repetitive patterns


-       Some  tests use long patterns that are very repetitive. Instead of cre-
-       ating a very long input line for such a pattern, you can use a  special
-       repetition  feature,  similar  to  the  one described for subject lines
-       above. If the expand modifier is present on a  pattern,  parts  of  the
+       Some tests use long patterns that are very repetitive. Instead of  cre-
+       ating  a very long input line for such a pattern, you can use a special
+       repetition feature, similar to the  one  described  for  subject  lines
+       above.  If  the  expand  modifier is present on a pattern, parts of the
        pattern that have the form


          \[<characters>]{<count>}
@@ -739,34 +740,34 @@


        are expanded before the pattern is passed to pcre2_compile(). For exam-
        ple, \[AB]{6000} is expanded to "ABAB..." 6000 times. This construction
-       cannot  be  nested. An initial "\[" sequence is recognized only if "]{"
-       followed by decimal digits and "}" is found later in  the  pattern.  If
+       cannot be nested. An initial "\[" sequence is recognized only  if  "]{"
+       followed  by  decimal  digits and "}" is found later in the pattern. If
        not, the characters remain in the pattern unaltered. The expand and hex
        modifiers are mutually exclusive.


-       If part of an expanded pattern looks like an expansion, but  is  really
+       If  part  of an expanded pattern looks like an expansion, but is really
        part of the actual pattern, unwanted expansion can be avoided by giving
        two values in the quantifier. For example, \[AB]{6000,6000} is not rec-
        ognized as an expansion item.


-       If  the  info modifier is set on an expanded pattern, the result of the
+       If the info modifier is set on an expanded pattern, the result  of  the
        expansion is included in the information that is output.


    JIT compilation


-       Just-in-time (JIT) compiling is a  heavyweight  optimization  that  can
-       greatly  speed  up pattern matching. See the pcre2jit documentation for
-       details. JIT compiling happens, optionally, after a  pattern  has  been
-       successfully  compiled into an internal form. The JIT compiler converts
+       Just-in-time  (JIT)  compiling  is  a heavyweight optimization that can
+       greatly speed up pattern matching. See the pcre2jit  documentation  for
+       details.  JIT  compiling  happens, optionally, after a pattern has been
+       successfully compiled into an internal form. The JIT compiler  converts
        this to optimized machine code. It needs to know whether the match-time
        options PCRE2_PARTIAL_HARD and PCRE2_PARTIAL_SOFT are going to be used,
-       because different code is generated for the different  cases.  See  the
-       partial  modifier in "Subject Modifiers" below for details of how these
+       because  different  code  is generated for the different cases. See the
+       partial modifier in "Subject Modifiers" below for details of how  these
        options are specified for each match attempt.


-       JIT compilation is requested by the jit  pattern  modifier,  which  may
+       JIT  compilation  is  requested  by the jit pattern modifier, which may
        optionally be followed by an equals sign and a number in the range 0 to
-       7.  The three bits that make up the number specify which of  the  three
+       7.   The  three bits that make up the number specify which of the three
        JIT operating modes are to be compiled:


          1  compile JIT code for non-partial matching
@@ -783,31 +784,31 @@
          6  soft and hard partial matching only
          7  all three modes


-       If  no  number  is  given,  7 is assumed. The phrase "partial matching"
+       If no number is given, 7 is  assumed.  The  phrase  "partial  matching"
        means a call to pcre2_match() with either the PCRE2_PARTIAL_SOFT or the
-       PCRE2_PARTIAL_HARD  option set. Note that such a call may return a com-
+       PCRE2_PARTIAL_HARD option set. Note that such a call may return a  com-
        plete match; the options enable the possibility of a partial match, but
-       do  not  require it. Note also that if you request JIT compilation only
-       for partial matching (for example, jit=2) but do not  set  the  partial
-       modifier  on  a  subject line, that match will not use JIT code because
+       do not require it. Note also that if you request JIT  compilation  only
+       for  partial  matching  (for example, jit=2) but do not set the partial
+       modifier on a subject line, that match will not use  JIT  code  because
        none was compiled for non-partial matching.


-       If JIT compilation is successful, the compiled JIT code will  automati-
-       cally  be  used  when  an appropriate type of match is run, except when
-       incompatible run-time options are specified. For more details, see  the
-       pcre2jit  documentation. See also the jitstack modifier below for a way
+       If  JIT compilation is successful, the compiled JIT code will automati-
+       cally be used when an appropriate type of match  is  run,  except  when
+       incompatible  run-time options are specified. For more details, see the
+       pcre2jit documentation. See also the jitstack modifier below for a  way
        of setting the size of the JIT stack.


-       If the jitfast modifier is specified, matching is done  using  the  JIT
-       "fast  path" interface, pcre2_jit_match(), which skips some of the san-
-       ity checks that are done by pcre2_match(), and of course does not  work
-       when  JIT  is not supported. If jitfast is specified without jit, jit=7
+       If  the  jitfast  modifier is specified, matching is done using the JIT
+       "fast path" interface, pcre2_jit_match(), which skips some of the  san-
+       ity  checks that are done by pcre2_match(), and of course does not work
+       when JIT is not supported. If jitfast is specified without  jit,  jit=7
        is assumed.


-       If the jitverify modifier is specified, information about the  compiled
-       pattern  shows  whether  JIT  compilation was or was not successful. If
-       jitverify is specified without jit, jit=7 is assumed. If  JIT  compila-
-       tion  is successful when jitverify is set, the text "(JIT)" is added to
+       If  the jitverify modifier is specified, information about the compiled
+       pattern shows whether JIT compilation was or  was  not  successful.  If
+       jitverify  is  specified without jit, jit=7 is assumed. If JIT compila-
+       tion is successful when jitverify is set, the text "(JIT)" is added  to
        the first output line after a match or non match when JIT-compiled code
        was actually used in the match.


@@ -818,19 +819,19 @@
          /pattern/locale=fr_FR


        The given locale is set, pcre2_maketables() is called to build a set of
-       character tables for the locale, and this is then passed to  pcre2_com-
-       pile()  when compiling the regular expression. The same tables are used
-       when matching the following subject lines. The locale modifier  applies
+       character  tables for the locale, and this is then passed to pcre2_com-
+       pile() when compiling the regular expression. The same tables are  used
+       when  matching the following subject lines. The locale modifier applies
        only to the pattern on which it appears, but can be given in a #pattern
-       command if a default is needed. Setting a locale and alternate  charac-
+       command  if a default is needed. Setting a locale and alternate charac-
        ter tables are mutually exclusive.


    Showing pattern memory


        The memory modifier causes the size in bytes of the memory used to hold
-       the compiled pattern to be output. This does not include  the  size  of
-       the  pcre2_code block; it is just the actual compiled data. If the pat-
-       tern is subsequently passed to the JIT compiler, the size  of  the  JIT
+       the  compiled  pattern  to be output. This does not include the size of
+       the pcre2_code block; it is just the actual compiled data. If the  pat-
+       tern  is  subsequently  passed to the JIT compiler, the size of the JIT
        compiled code is also output. Here is an example:


            re> /a(b)c/jit,memory
@@ -840,27 +841,27 @@


    Limiting nested parentheses


-       The  parens_nest_limit  modifier  sets  a  limit on the depth of nested
-       parentheses in a pattern. Breaching  the  limit  causes  a  compilation
-       error.   The  default  for  the library is set when PCRE2 is built, but
-       pcre2test sets its own default of 220, which is  required  for  running
+       The parens_nest_limit modifier sets a limit  on  the  depth  of  nested
+       parentheses  in  a  pattern.  Breaching  the limit causes a compilation
+       error.  The default for the library is set when  PCRE2  is  built,  but
+       pcre2test  sets  its  own default of 220, which is required for running
        the standard test suite.


    Limiting the pattern length


-       The  max_pattern_length  modifier  sets  a limit, in code units, to the
+       The max_pattern_length modifier sets a limit, in  code  units,  to  the
        length of pattern that pcre2_compile() will accept. Breaching the limit
-       causes  a  compilation  error.  The  default  is  the  largest number a
+       causes a compilation  error.  The  default  is  the  largest  number  a
        PCRE2_SIZE variable can hold (essentially unlimited).


    Using the POSIX wrapper API


-       The posix and posix_nosub modifiers cause pcre2test to call  PCRE2  via
-       the  POSIX  wrapper API rather than its native API. When posix_nosub is
-       used, the POSIX option REG_NOSUB is  passed  to  regcomp().  The  POSIX
-       wrapper  supports  only  the 8-bit library. Note that it does not imply
+       The  posix  and posix_nosub modifiers cause pcre2test to call PCRE2 via
+       the POSIX wrapper API rather than its native API. When  posix_nosub  is
+       used,  the  POSIX  option  REG_NOSUB  is passed to regcomp(). The POSIX
+       wrapper supports only the 8-bit library. Note that it  does  not  imply
        POSIX matching semantics; for more detail see the pcre2posix documenta-
-       tion.  The  following  pattern  modifiers set options for the regcomp()
+       tion. The following pattern modifiers set  options  for  the  regcomp()
        function:


          caseless           REG_ICASE
@@ -870,39 +871,39 @@
          ucp                REG_UCP        )   the POSIX standard
          utf                REG_UTF8       )


-       The regerror_buffsize modifier specifies a size for  the  error  buffer
-       that  is  passed to regerror() in the event of a compilation error. For
+       The  regerror_buffsize  modifier  specifies a size for the error buffer
+       that is passed to regerror() in the event of a compilation  error.  For
        example:


          /abc/posix,regerror_buffsize=20


-       This provides a means of testing the behaviour of regerror()  when  the
-       buffer  is  too  small  for the error message. If this modifier has not
+       This  provides  a means of testing the behaviour of regerror() when the
+       buffer is too small for the error message. If  this  modifier  has  not
        been set, a large buffer is used.


-       The aftertext and allaftertext  subject  modifiers  work  as  described
-       below.  All other modifiers are either ignored, with a warning message,
+       The  aftertext  and  allaftertext  subject  modifiers work as described
+       below. All other modifiers are either ignored, with a warning  message,
        or cause an error.


-       The pattern is passed to  regcomp()  as  a  zero-terminated  string  by
-       default,  but  if the use_length or hex modifiers are set, the REG_PEND
+       The  pattern  is  passed  to  regcomp()  as a zero-terminated string by
+       default, but if the use_length or hex modifiers are set,  the  REG_PEND
        extension is used to pass it by length.


    Testing the stack guard feature


-       The stackguard modifier is used  to  test  the  use  of  pcre2_set_com-
-       pile_recursion_guard(),  a  function  that  is provided to enable stack
-       availability to be checked during compilation (see the  pcre2api  docu-
-       mentation  for  details).  If  the  number specified by the modifier is
+       The  stackguard  modifier  is  used  to  test the use of pcre2_set_com-
+       pile_recursion_guard(), a function that is  provided  to  enable  stack
+       availability  to  be checked during compilation (see the pcre2api docu-
+       mentation for details). If the number  specified  by  the  modifier  is
        greater than zero, pcre2_set_compile_recursion_guard() is called to set
-       up  callback  from pcre2_compile() to a local function. The argument it
-       receives is the current nesting parenthesis depth; if this  is  greater
+       up callback from pcre2_compile() to a local function. The  argument  it
+       receives  is  the current nesting parenthesis depth; if this is greater
        than the value given by the modifier, non-zero is returned, causing the
        compilation to be aborted.


    Using alternative character tables


-       The value specified for the tables modifier must be one of  the  digits
+       The  value  specified for the tables modifier must be one of the digits
        0, 1, or 2. It causes a specific set of built-in character tables to be
        passed to pcre2_compile(). This is used in the PCRE2 tests to check be-
        haviour with different character tables. The digit specifies the tables
@@ -913,16 +914,16 @@
                pcre2_chartables.c.dist
          2   a set of tables defining ISO 8859 characters


-       In table 2, some characters whose codes are greater than 128 are  iden-
-       tified  as  letters,  digits,  spaces, etc. Setting alternate character
+       In  table 2, some characters whose codes are greater than 128 are iden-
+       tified as letters, digits, spaces,  etc.  Setting  alternate  character
        tables and a locale are mutually exclusive.


    Setting certain match controls


        The following modifiers are really subject modifiers, and are described
-       under  "Subject  Modifiers"  below.  However, they may be included in a
-       pattern's modifier list, in which case they are applied to  every  sub-
-       ject  line  that is processed with that pattern. These modifiers do not
+       under "Subject Modifiers" below. However, they may  be  included  in  a
+       pattern's  modifier  list, in which case they are applied to every sub-
+       ject line that is processed with that pattern. These modifiers  do  not
        affect the compilation process.


              aftertext                  show text after match
@@ -940,39 +941,39 @@
              substitute_unknown_unset   use PCRE2_SUBSTITUTE_UNKNOWN_UNSET
              substitute_unset_empty     use PCRE2_SUBSTITUTE_UNSET_EMPTY


-       These modifiers may not appear in a #pattern command. If you want  them
+       These  modifiers may not appear in a #pattern command. If you want them
        as defaults, set them in a #subject command.


    Specifying literal subject lines


-       If  the  subject_literal modifier is present on a pattern, all the sub-
+       If the subject_literal modifier is present on a pattern, all  the  sub-
        ject lines that it matches are taken as literal strings, with no inter-
-       pretation  of  backslashes. It is not possible to set subject modifiers
-       on such lines, but any that are set as defaults by a  #subject  command
+       pretation of backslashes. It is not possible to set  subject  modifiers
+       on  such  lines, but any that are set as defaults by a #subject command
        are recognized.


    Saving a compiled pattern


-       When  a  pattern with the push modifier is successfully compiled, it is
-       pushed onto a stack of compiled patterns,  and  pcre2test  expects  the
-       next  line to contain a new pattern (or a command) instead of a subject
+       When a pattern with the push modifier is successfully compiled,  it  is
+       pushed  onto  a  stack  of compiled patterns, and pcre2test expects the
+       next line to contain a new pattern (or a command) instead of a  subject
        line. This facility is used when saving compiled patterns to a file, as
-       described  in  the section entitled "Saving and restoring compiled pat-
-       terns" below.  If pushcopy is used instead of push, a copy of the  com-
-       piled  pattern  is  stacked,  leaving the original as current, ready to
-       match the following input lines. This provides a  way  of  testing  the
-       pcre2_code_copy()  function.   The  push  and  pushcopy   modifiers are
-       incompatible with compilation modifiers such  as  global  that  act  at
-       match  time. Any that are specified are ignored (for the stacked copy),
+       described in the section entitled "Saving and restoring  compiled  pat-
+       terns"  below.  If pushcopy is used instead of push, a copy of the com-
+       piled pattern is stacked, leaving the original  as  current,  ready  to
+       match  the  following  input  lines. This provides a way of testing the
+       pcre2_code_copy() function.   The  push  and  pushcopy   modifiers  are
+       incompatible  with  compilation  modifiers  such  as global that act at
+       match time. Any that are specified are ignored (for the stacked  copy),
        with a warning message, except for replace, which causes an error. Note
-       that  jitverify, which is allowed, does not carry through to any subse-
+       that jitverify, which is allowed, does not carry through to any  subse-
        quent matching that uses a stacked pattern.


    Testing foreign pattern conversion


-       The experimental foreign pattern conversion functions in PCRE2  can  be
-       tested  by  setting the convert modifier. Its argument is a colon-sepa-
-       rated list  of  options,  which  set  the  equivalent  option  for  the
+       The  experimental  foreign pattern conversion functions in PCRE2 can be
+       tested by setting the convert modifier. Its argument is  a  colon-sepa-
+       rated  list  of  options,  which  set  the  equivalent  option  for the
        pcre2_pattern_convert() function:


          glob                    PCRE2_CONVERT_GLOB
@@ -984,19 +985,19 @@


        The "unset" value is useful for turning off a default that has been set
        by a #pattern command. When one of these options is set, the input pat-
-       tern  is  passed  to pcre2_pattern_convert(). If the conversion is suc-
-       cessful, the result is reflected in  the  output  and  then  passed  to
+       tern is passed to pcre2_pattern_convert(). If the  conversion  is  suc-
+       cessful,  the  result  is  reflected  in  the output and then passed to
        pcre2_compile(). The normal utf and no_utf_check options, if set, cause
-       the PCRE2_CONVERT_UTF  and  PCRE2_CONVERT_NO_UTF_CHECK  options  to  be
+       the  PCRE2_CONVERT_UTF  and  PCRE2_CONVERT_NO_UTF_CHECK  options  to be
        passed to pcre2_pattern_convert().


        By default, the conversion function is allowed to allocate a buffer for
-       its output. However, if the convert_length modifier is set to  a  value
-       greater  than zero, pcre2test passes a buffer of the given length. This
+       its  output.  However, if the convert_length modifier is set to a value
+       greater than zero, pcre2test passes a buffer of the given length.  This
        makes it possible to test the length check.


-       The convert_glob_escape and  convert_glob_separator  modifiers  can  be
-       used  to  specify the escape and separator characters for glob process-
+       The  convert_glob_escape  and  convert_glob_separator  modifiers can be
+       used to specify the escape and separator characters for  glob  process-
        ing, overriding the defaults, which are operating-system dependent.



@@ -1007,7 +1008,7 @@

    Setting match options


-       The    following   modifiers   set   options   for   pcre2_match()   or
+       The   following   modifiers   set   options   for   pcre2_match()    or
        pcre2_dfa_match(). See pcreapi for a description of their effects.


              anchored                  set PCRE2_ANCHORED
@@ -1023,34 +1024,34 @@
              partial_hard (or ph)      set PCRE2_PARTIAL_HARD
              partial_soft (or ps)      set PCRE2_PARTIAL_SOFT


-       The partial matching modifiers are provided with abbreviations  because
+       The  partial matching modifiers are provided with abbreviations because
        they appear frequently in tests.


-       If  the posix or posix_nosub modifier was present on the pattern, caus-
+       If the posix or posix_nosub modifier was present on the pattern,  caus-
        ing the POSIX wrapper API to be used, the only option-setting modifiers
        that have any effect are notbol, notempty, and noteol, causing REG_NOT-
-       BOL, REG_NOTEMPTY,  and  REG_NOTEOL,  respectively,  to  be  passed  to
+       BOL,  REG_NOTEMPTY,  and  REG_NOTEOL,  respectively,  to  be  passed to
        regexec(). The other modifiers are ignored, with a warning message.


-       There  is one additional modifier that can be used with the POSIX wrap-
+       There is one additional modifier that can be used with the POSIX  wrap-
        per. It is ignored (with a warning) if used for non-POSIX matching.


              posix_startend=<n>[:<m>]


-       This causes the subject string to be  passed  to  regexec()  using  the
-       REG_STARTEND  option,  which  uses offsets to specify which part of the
-       string is searched. If only one number is  given,  the  end  offset  is
-       passed  as  the end of the subject string. For more detail of REG_STAR-
-       TEND, see the pcre2posix documentation. If the subject string  contains
-       binary  zeros  (coded  as escapes such as \x{00} because pcre2test does
+       This  causes  the  subject  string  to be passed to regexec() using the
+       REG_STARTEND option, which uses offsets to specify which  part  of  the
+       string  is  searched.  If  only  one number is given, the end offset is
+       passed as the end of the subject string. For more detail  of  REG_STAR-
+       TEND,  see the pcre2posix documentation. If the subject string contains
+       binary zeros (coded as escapes such as \x{00}  because  pcre2test  does
        not support actual binary zeros in its input), you must use posix_star-
        tend to specify its length.


    Setting match controls


-       The  following  modifiers  affect the matching process or request addi-
-       tional information. Some of them may also be  specified  on  a  pattern
-       line  (see  above), in which case they apply to every subject line that
+       The following modifiers affect the matching process  or  request  addi-
+       tional  information.  Some  of  them may also be specified on a pattern
+       line (see above), in which case they apply to every subject  line  that
        is matched against that pattern.


              aftertext                  show text after match
@@ -1092,29 +1093,29 @@
              zero_terminate             pass the subject as zero-terminated


        The effects of these modifiers are described in the following sections.
-       When  matching  via the POSIX wrapper API, the aftertext, allaftertext,
-       and ovector subject modifiers work as described below. All other  modi-
+       When matching via the POSIX wrapper API, the  aftertext,  allaftertext,
+       and  ovector subject modifiers work as described below. All other modi-
        fiers are either ignored, with a warning message, or cause an error.


    Showing more text


-       The  aftertext modifier requests that as well as outputting the part of
+       The aftertext modifier requests that as well as outputting the part  of
        the subject string that matched the entire pattern, pcre2test should in
        addition output the remainder of the subject string. This is useful for
        tests where the subject contains multiple copies of the same substring.
-       The  allaftertext  modifier  requests the same action for captured sub-
+       The allaftertext modifier requests the same action  for  captured  sub-
        strings as well as the main matched substring. In each case the remain-
        der is output on the following line with a plus character following the
        capture number.


-       The allusedtext modifier requests that all the text that was  consulted
-       during  a  successful pattern match by the interpreter should be shown.
-       This feature is not supported for JIT matching, and if  requested  with
-       JIT  it  is  ignored  (with  a  warning message). Setting this modifier
+       The  allusedtext modifier requests that all the text that was consulted
+       during a successful pattern match by the interpreter should  be  shown.
+       This  feature  is not supported for JIT matching, and if requested with
+       JIT it is ignored (with  a  warning  message).  Setting  this  modifier
        affects the output if there is a lookbehind at the start of a match, or
-       a  lookahead  at  the  end, or if \K is used in the pattern. Characters
-       that precede or follow the start and end of the actual match are  indi-
-       cated  in  the output by '<' or '>' characters underneath them. Here is
+       a lookahead at the end, or if \K is used  in  the  pattern.  Characters
+       that  precede or follow the start and end of the actual match are indi-
+       cated in the output by '<' or '>' characters underneath them.  Here  is
        an example:


            re> /(?<=pqr)abc(?=xyz)/
@@ -1122,16 +1123,16 @@
           0: pqrabcxyz
              <<<   >>>


-       This shows that the matched string is "abc",  with  the  preceding  and
-       following  strings  "pqr"  and  "xyz"  having been consulted during the
+       This  shows  that  the  matched string is "abc", with the preceding and
+       following strings "pqr" and "xyz"  having  been  consulted  during  the
        match (when processing the assertions).


-       The startchar modifier requests that the  starting  character  for  the
-       match  be  indicated,  if  it  is different to the start of the matched
+       The  startchar  modifier  requests  that the starting character for the
+       match be indicated, if it is different to  the  start  of  the  matched
        string. The only time when this occurs is when \K has been processed as
        part of the match. In this situation, the output for the matched string
-       is displayed from the starting character  instead  of  from  the  match
-       point,  with  circumflex  characters  under the earlier characters. For
+       is  displayed  from  the  starting  character instead of from the match
+       point, with circumflex characters under  the  earlier  characters.  For
        example:


            re> /abc\Kxyz/
@@ -1139,7 +1140,7 @@
           0: abcxyz
              ^^^


-       Unlike allusedtext, the startchar modifier can be used with JIT.   How-
+       Unlike  allusedtext, the startchar modifier can be used with JIT.  How-
        ever, these two modifiers are mutually exclusive.


    Showing the value of all capture groups
@@ -1147,78 +1148,78 @@
        The allcaptures modifier requests that the values of all potential cap-
        tured parentheses be output after a match. By default, only those up to
        the highest one actually used in the match are output (corresponding to
-       the return code from pcre2_match()). Groups that did not take  part  in
-       the  match  are  output as "<unset>". This modifier is not relevant for
-       DFA matching (which does no capturing); it is ignored, with  a  warning
+       the  return  code from pcre2_match()). Groups that did not take part in
+       the match are output as "<unset>". This modifier is  not  relevant  for
+       DFA  matching  (which does no capturing); it is ignored, with a warning
        message, if present.


    Testing callouts


-       A  callout function is supplied when pcre2test calls the library match-
-       ing functions, unless callout_none is specified. Its behaviour  can  be
-       controlled  by  various  modifiers  listed above whose names begin with
+       A callout function is supplied when pcre2test calls the library  match-
+       ing  functions,  unless callout_none is specified. Its behaviour can be
+       controlled by various modifiers listed above  whose  names  begin  with
        callout_. Details are given in the section entitled "Callouts" below.


    Finding all matches in a string


        Searching for all possible matches within a subject can be requested by
-       the  global  or altglobal modifier. After finding a match, the matching
-       function is called again to search the remainder of  the  subject.  The
-       difference  between  global  and  altglobal is that the former uses the
-       start_offset argument to pcre2_match() or  pcre2_dfa_match()  to  start
-       searching  at  a new point within the entire string (which is what Perl
+       the global or altglobal modifier. After finding a match,  the  matching
+       function  is  called  again to search the remainder of the subject. The
+       difference between global and altglobal is that  the  former  uses  the
+       start_offset  argument  to  pcre2_match() or pcre2_dfa_match() to start
+       searching at a new point within the entire string (which is  what  Perl
        does), whereas the latter passes over a shortened subject. This makes a
        difference to the matching process if the pattern begins with a lookbe-
        hind assertion (including \b or \B).


-       If an empty string  is  matched,  the  next  match  is  done  with  the
+       If  an  empty  string  is  matched,  the  next  match  is done with the
        PCRE2_NOTEMPTY_ATSTART and PCRE2_ANCHORED flags set, in order to search
        for another, non-empty, match at the same point in the subject. If this
-       match  fails,  the  start  offset  is advanced, and the normal match is
-       retried. This imitates the way Perl handles such cases when  using  the
-       /g  modifier  or  the  split()  function. Normally, the start offset is
-       advanced by one character, but if  the  newline  convention  recognizes
-       CRLF  as  a newline, and the current character is CR followed by LF, an
+       match fails, the start offset is advanced,  and  the  normal  match  is
+       retried.  This  imitates the way Perl handles such cases when using the
+       /g modifier or the split() function.  Normally,  the  start  offset  is
+       advanced  by  one  character,  but if the newline convention recognizes
+       CRLF as a newline, and the current character is CR followed by  LF,  an
        advance of two characters occurs.


    Testing substring extraction functions


-       The copy  and  get  modifiers  can  be  used  to  test  the  pcre2_sub-
+       The  copy  and  get  modifiers  can  be  used  to  test  the pcre2_sub-
        string_copy_xxx() and pcre2_substring_get_xxx() functions.  They can be
-       given more than once, and each can specify a group name or number,  for
+       given  more than once, and each can specify a group name or number, for
        example:


           abcd\=copy=1,copy=3,get=G1


-       If  the  #subject command is used to set default copy and/or get lists,
-       these can be unset by specifying a negative number to cancel  all  num-
+       If the #subject command is used to set default copy and/or  get  lists,
+       these  can  be unset by specifying a negative number to cancel all num-
        bered groups and an empty name to cancel all named groups.


-       The  getall  modifier  tests pcre2_substring_list_get(), which extracts
+       The getall modifier tests  pcre2_substring_list_get(),  which  extracts
        all captured substrings.


-       If the subject line is successfully matched, the  substrings  extracted
-       by  the  convenience  functions  are  output  with C, G, or L after the
-       string number instead of a colon. This is in  addition  to  the  normal
-       full  list.  The string length (that is, the return from the extraction
+       If  the  subject line is successfully matched, the substrings extracted
+       by the convenience functions are output with  C,  G,  or  L  after  the
+       string  number  instead  of  a colon. This is in addition to the normal
+       full list. The string length (that is, the return from  the  extraction
        function) is given in parentheses after each substring, followed by the
        name when the extraction was by name.


    Testing the substitution function


-       If  the  replace  modifier  is  set, the pcre2_substitute() function is
-       called instead of one of the matching functions. Note that  replacement
-       strings  cannot  contain commas, because a comma signifies the end of a
+       If the replace modifier is  set,  the  pcre2_substitute()  function  is
+       called  instead of one of the matching functions. Note that replacement
+       strings cannot contain commas, because a comma signifies the end  of  a
        modifier. This is not thought to be an issue in a test program.


-       Unlike subject strings, pcre2test does not process replacement  strings
-       for  escape  sequences. In UTF mode, a replacement string is checked to
-       see if it is a valid UTF-8 string. If so, it is correctly converted  to
-       a  UTF  string of the appropriate code unit width. If it is not a valid
-       UTF-8 string, the individual code units are copied directly. This  pro-
+       Unlike  subject strings, pcre2test does not process replacement strings
+       for escape sequences. In UTF mode, a replacement string is  checked  to
+       see  if it is a valid UTF-8 string. If so, it is correctly converted to
+       a UTF string of the appropriate code unit width. If it is not  a  valid
+       UTF-8  string, the individual code units are copied directly. This pro-
        vides a means of passing an invalid UTF-8 string for testing purposes.


-       The  following modifiers set options (in additional to the normal match
+       The following modifiers set options (in additional to the normal  match
        options) for pcre2_substitute():


          global                      PCRE2_SUBSTITUTE_GLOBAL
@@ -1228,8 +1229,8 @@
          substitute_unset_empty      PCRE2_SUBSTITUTE_UNSET_EMPTY



-       After a successful substitution, the modified string  is  output,  pre-
-       ceded  by the number of replacements. This may be zero if there were no
+       After  a  successful  substitution, the modified string is output, pre-
+       ceded by the number of replacements. This may be zero if there were  no
        matches. Here is a simple example of a substitution test:


          /abc/replace=xxx
@@ -1238,12 +1239,12 @@
              =abc=abc=\=global
           2: =xxx=xxx=


-       Subject and replacement strings should be kept relatively short  (fewer
-       than  256 characters) for substitution tests, as fixed-size buffers are
-       used. To make it easy to test for buffer overflow, if  the  replacement
-       string  starts  with a number in square brackets, that number is passed
-       to pcre2_substitute() as the  size  of  the  output  buffer,  with  the
-       replacement  string  starting at the next character. Here is an example
+       Subject  and replacement strings should be kept relatively short (fewer
+       than 256 characters) for substitution tests, as fixed-size buffers  are
+       used.  To  make it easy to test for buffer overflow, if the replacement
+       string starts with a number in square brackets, that number  is  passed
+       to  pcre2_substitute()  as  the  size  of  the  output buffer, with the
+       replacement string starting at the next character. Here is  an  example
        that tests the edge case:


          /abc/
@@ -1252,11 +1253,11 @@
              123abc123\=replace=[9]XYZ
          Failed: error -47: no more memory


-       The   default   action   of    pcre2_substitute()    is    to    return
-       PCRE2_ERROR_NOMEMORY  when  the output buffer is too small. However, if
-       the PCRE2_SUBSTITUTE_OVERFLOW_LENGTH option is set (by using  the  sub-
-       stitute_overflow_length  modifier),  pcre2_substitute() continues to go
-       through the motions of matching and substituting, in order  to  compute
+       The    default    action    of    pcre2_substitute()   is   to   return
+       PCRE2_ERROR_NOMEMORY when the output buffer is too small.  However,  if
+       the  PCRE2_SUBSTITUTE_OVERFLOW_LENGTH  option is set (by using the sub-
+       stitute_overflow_length modifier), pcre2_substitute() continues  to  go
+       through  the  motions of matching and substituting, in order to compute
        the size of buffer that is required. When this happens, pcre2test shows
        the required buffer length (which includes space for the trailing zero)
        as part of the error message. For example:
@@ -1266,60 +1267,60 @@
          Failed: error -47: no more memory: 10 code units are needed


        A replacement string is ignored with POSIX and DFA matching. Specifying
-       partial matching provokes an error return  ("bad  option  value")  from
+       partial  matching  provokes  an  error return ("bad option value") from
        pcre2_substitute().


    Setting the JIT stack size


-       The  jitstack modifier provides a way of setting the maximum stack size
-       that is used by the just-in-time optimization code. It  is  ignored  if
-       JIT  optimization is not being used. The value is a number of kibibytes
-       (units of 1024 bytes). Setting zero reverts to the  default  of  32KiB.
+       The jitstack modifier provides a way of setting the maximum stack  size
+       that  is  used  by the just-in-time optimization code. It is ignored if
+       JIT optimization is not being used. The value is a number of  kibibytes
+       (units  of  1024  bytes). Setting zero reverts to the default of 32KiB.
        Providing a stack that is larger than the default is necessary only for
-       very complicated patterns. If jitstack is set  non-zero  on  a  subject
+       very  complicated  patterns.  If  jitstack is set non-zero on a subject
        line it overrides any value that was set on the pattern.


    Setting heap, match, and depth limits


-       The  heap_limit,  match_limit, and depth_limit modifiers set the appro-
-       priate limits in the match context. These values are ignored  when  the
+       The heap_limit, match_limit, and depth_limit modifiers set  the  appro-
+       priate  limits  in the match context. These values are ignored when the
        find_limits modifier is specified.


    Finding minimum limits


-       If  the  find_limits  modifier  is present on a subject line, pcre2test
-       calls the relevant matching function several times,  setting  different
-       values    in    the    match    context   via   pcre2_set_heap_limit(),
-       pcre2_set_match_limit(), or pcre2_set_depth_limit() until it finds  the
-       minimum  values  for  each  parameter that allows the match to complete
+       If the find_limits modifier is present on  a  subject  line,  pcre2test
+       calls  the  relevant matching function several times, setting different
+       values   in   the    match    context    via    pcre2_set_heap_limit(),
+       pcre2_set_match_limit(),  or pcre2_set_depth_limit() until it finds the
+       minimum values for each parameter that allows  the  match  to  complete
        without error. If JIT is being used, only the match limit is relevant.


        When using this modifier, the pattern should not contain any limit set-
-       tings  such  as  (*LIMIT_MATCH=...)  within  it.  If  such a setting is
+       tings such as (*LIMIT_MATCH=...)  within  it.  If  such  a  setting  is
        present and is lower than the minimum matching value, the minimum value
-       cannot  be  found because pcre2_set_match_limit() etc. are only able to
+       cannot be found because pcre2_set_match_limit() etc. are only  able  to
        reduce the value of an in-pattern limit; they cannot increase it.


-       For non-DFA matching, the minimum depth_limit number is  a  measure  of
+       For  non-DFA  matching,  the minimum depth_limit number is a measure of
        how much nested backtracking happens (that is, how deeply the pattern's
-       tree is searched). In the case of DFA  matching,  depth_limit  controls
-       the  depth of recursive calls of the internal function that is used for
+       tree  is  searched).  In the case of DFA matching, depth_limit controls
+       the depth of recursive calls of the internal function that is used  for
        handling pattern recursion, lookaround assertions, and atomic groups.


        For non-DFA matching, the match_limit number is a measure of the amount
        of backtracking that takes place, and learning the minimum value can be
-       instructive. For most simple matches, the number is  quite  small,  but
-       for  patterns with very large numbers of matching possibilities, it can
-       become large very quickly with increasing length of subject string.  In
-       the  case  of  DFA  matching,  match_limit controls the total number of
+       instructive.  For  most  simple matches, the number is quite small, but
+       for patterns with very large numbers of matching possibilities, it  can
+       become  large very quickly with increasing length of subject string. In
+       the case of DFA matching, match_limit  controls  the  total  number  of
        calls, both recursive and non-recursive, to the internal matching func-
        tion, thus controlling the overall amount of computing resource that is
        used.


-       For both  kinds  of  matching,  the  heap_limit  number,  which  is  in
-       kibibytes  (units of 1024 bytes), limits the amount of heap memory used
+       For  both  kinds  of  matching,  the  heap_limit  number,  which  is in
+       kibibytes (units of 1024 bytes), limits the amount of heap memory  used
        for matching. A value of zero disables the use of any heap memory; many
-       simple  pattern  matches can be done without using the heap, so zero is
+       simple pattern matches can be done without using the heap, so  zero  is
        not an unreasonable setting.


    Showing MARK names
@@ -1326,50 +1327,50 @@



        The mark modifier causes the names from backtracking control verbs that
-       are  returned from calls to pcre2_match() to be displayed. If a mark is
-       returned for a match, non-match, or partial match, pcre2test shows  it.
-       For  a  match, it is on a line by itself, tagged with "MK:". Otherwise,
+       are returned from calls to pcre2_match() to be displayed. If a mark  is
+       returned  for a match, non-match, or partial match, pcre2test shows it.
+       For a match, it is on a line by itself, tagged with  "MK:".  Otherwise,
        it is added to the non-match message.


    Showing memory usage


-       The memory modifier causes pcre2test to log the sizes of all heap  mem-
-       ory   allocation  and  freeing  calls  that  occur  during  a  call  to
-       pcre2_match() or pcre2_dfa_match().  These  occur  only  when  a  match
-       requires  a bigger vector than the default for remembering backtracking
-       points (pcre2_match()) or for internal  workspace  (pcre2_dfa_match()).
-       In  many cases there will be no heap memory used and therefore no addi-
+       The  memory modifier causes pcre2test to log the sizes of all heap mem-
+       ory  allocation  and  freeing  calls  that  occur  during  a  call   to
+       pcre2_match()  or  pcre2_dfa_match().  These  occur  only  when a match
+       requires a bigger vector than the default for remembering  backtracking
+       points  (pcre2_match())  or for internal workspace (pcre2_dfa_match()).
+       In many cases there will be no heap memory used and therefore no  addi-
        tional output. No heap memory is allocated during matching with JIT, so
-       in  that  case the memory modifier never has any effect. For this modi-
-       fier to work, the null_context modifier must not be  set  on  both  the
+       in that case the memory modifier never has any effect. For  this  modi-
+       fier  to  work,  the  null_context modifier must not be set on both the
        pattern and the subject, though it can be set on one or the other.


    Setting a starting offset


-       The  offset  modifier  sets  an  offset  in the subject string at which
+       The offset modifier sets an offset  in  the  subject  string  at  which
        matching starts. Its value is a number of code units, not characters.


    Setting an offset limit


-       The offset_limit modifier sets a limit for  unanchored  matches.  If  a
+       The  offset_limit  modifier  sets  a limit for unanchored matches. If a
        match cannot be found starting at or before this offset in the subject,
        a "no match" return is given. The data value is a number of code units,
-       not  characters. When this modifier is used, the use_offset_limit modi-
+       not characters. When this modifier is used, the use_offset_limit  modi-
        fier must have been set for the pattern; if not, an error is generated.


    Setting the size of the output vector


-       The ovector modifier applies only to  the  subject  line  in  which  it
-       appears,  though  of  course  it can also be used to set a default in a
-       #subject command. It specifies the number of pairs of offsets that  are
+       The  ovector  modifier  applies  only  to  the subject line in which it
+       appears, though of course it can also be used to set  a  default  in  a
+       #subject  command. It specifies the number of pairs of offsets that are
        available for storing matching information. The default is 15.


-       A  value of zero is useful when testing the POSIX API because it causes
+       A value of zero is useful when testing the POSIX API because it  causes
        regexec() to be called with a NULL capture vector. When not testing the
-       POSIX  API,  a  value  of  zero  is used to cause pcre2_match_data_cre-
-       ate_from_pattern() to be called, in order to create a  match  block  of
+       POSIX API, a value of  zero  is  used  to  cause  pcre2_match_data_cre-
+       ate_from_pattern()  to  be  called, in order to create a match block of
        exactly the right size for the pattern. (It is not possible to create a
-       match block with a zero-length ovector; there is always  at  least  one
+       match  block  with  a zero-length ovector; there is always at least one
        pair of offsets.)


    Passing the subject as zero-terminated
@@ -1376,55 +1377,55 @@


        By default, the subject string is passed to a native API matching func-
        tion with its correct length. In order to test the facility for passing
-       a  zero-terminated  string, the zero_terminate modifier is provided. It
-       causes the length to be passed as PCRE2_ZERO_TERMINATED. When  matching
+       a zero-terminated string, the zero_terminate modifier is  provided.  It
+       causes  the length to be passed as PCRE2_ZERO_TERMINATED. When matching
        via the POSIX interface, this modifier is ignored, with a warning.


-       When  testing  pcre2_substitute(), this modifier also has the effect of
+       When testing pcre2_substitute(), this modifier also has the  effect  of
        passing the replacement string as zero-terminated.


    Passing a NULL context


-       Normally,  pcre2test  passes  a   context   block   to   pcre2_match(),
+       Normally,   pcre2test   passes   a   context  block  to  pcre2_match(),
        pcre2_dfa_match() or pcre2_jit_match(). If the null_context modifier is
-       set, however, NULL is passed. This is for  testing  that  the  matching
+       set,  however,  NULL  is  passed. This is for testing that the matching
        functions behave correctly in this case (they use default values). This
-       modifier cannot be used with the find_limits modifier or  when  testing
+       modifier  cannot  be used with the find_limits modifier or when testing
        the substitution function.



THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION

-       By  default,  pcre2test  uses  the  standard  PCRE2  matching function,
+       By default,  pcre2test  uses  the  standard  PCRE2  matching  function,
        pcre2_match() to match each subject line. PCRE2 also supports an alter-
-       native  matching  function, pcre2_dfa_match(), which operates in a dif-
-       ferent way, and has some restrictions. The differences between the  two
+       native matching function, pcre2_dfa_match(), which operates in  a  dif-
+       ferent  way, and has some restrictions. The differences between the two
        functions are described in the pcre2matching documentation.


-       If  the dfa modifier is set, the alternative matching function is used.
-       This function finds all possible matches at a given point in  the  sub-
-       ject.  If,  however, the dfa_shortest modifier is set, processing stops
-       after the first match is found. This is always  the  shortest  possible
+       If the dfa modifier is set, the alternative matching function is  used.
+       This  function  finds all possible matches at a given point in the sub-
+       ject. If, however, the dfa_shortest modifier is set,  processing  stops
+       after  the  first  match is found. This is always the shortest possible
        match.



DEFAULT OUTPUT FROM pcre2test

-       This  section  describes  the output when the normal matching function,
+       This section describes the output when the  normal  matching  function,
        pcre2_match(), is being used.


-       When a match succeeds, pcre2test outputs  the  list  of  captured  sub-
-       strings,  starting  with number 0 for the string that matched the whole
-       pattern.   Otherwise,  it  outputs  "No  match"  when  the  return   is
-       PCRE2_ERROR_NOMATCH,  or  "Partial  match:"  followed  by the partially
-       matching substring when the return is PCRE2_ERROR_PARTIAL.  (Note  that
-       this  is  the  entire  substring  that was inspected during the partial
-       match; it may include characters before the actual  match  start  if  a
+       When  a  match  succeeds,  pcre2test  outputs the list of captured sub-
+       strings, starting with number 0 for the string that matched  the  whole
+       pattern.    Otherwise,  it  outputs  "No  match"  when  the  return  is
+       PCRE2_ERROR_NOMATCH, or "Partial  match:"  followed  by  the  partially
+       matching  substring  when the return is PCRE2_ERROR_PARTIAL. (Note that
+       this is the entire substring that  was  inspected  during  the  partial
+       match;  it  may  include  characters before the actual match start if a
        lookbehind assertion, \K, \b, or \B was involved.)


        For any other return, pcre2test outputs the PCRE2 negative error number
-       and a short descriptive phrase. If the error is  a  failed  UTF  string
-       check,  the  code  unit offset of the start of the failing character is
+       and  a  short  descriptive  phrase. If the error is a failed UTF string
+       check, the code unit offset of the start of the  failing  character  is
        also output. Here is an example of an interactive pcre2test run.


          $ pcre2test
@@ -1440,8 +1441,8 @@
        Unset capturing substrings that are not followed by one that is set are
        not shown by pcre2test unless the allcaptures modifier is specified. In
        the following example, there are two capturing substrings, but when the
-       first  data  line is matched, the second, unset substring is not shown.
-       An "internal" unset substring is shown as "<unset>", as for the  second
+       first data line is matched, the second, unset substring is  not  shown.
+       An  "internal" unset substring is shown as "<unset>", as for the second
        data line.


            re> /(a)|(b)/
@@ -1453,11 +1454,11 @@
           1: <unset>
           2: b


-       If  the strings contain any non-printing characters, they are output as
-       \xhh escapes if the value is less than 256 and UTF  mode  is  not  set.
+       If the strings contain any non-printing characters, they are output  as
+       \xhh  escapes  if  the  value is less than 256 and UTF mode is not set.
        Otherwise they are output as \x{hh...} escapes. See below for the defi-
-       nition of non-printing characters. If the aftertext  modifier  is  set,
-       the  output  for substring 0 is followed by the the rest of the subject
+       nition  of  non-printing  characters. If the aftertext modifier is set,
+       the output for substring 0 is followed by the the rest of  the  subject
        string, identified by "0+" like this:


            re> /cat/aftertext
@@ -1465,7 +1466,7 @@
           0: cat
           0+ aract


-       If global matching is requested, the  results  of  successive  matching
+       If  global  matching  is  requested, the results of successive matching
        attempts are output in sequence, like this:


            re> /\Bi(\w\w)/g
@@ -1477,8 +1478,8 @@
           0: ipp
           1: pp


-       "No  match" is output only if the first match attempt fails. Here is an
-       example of a failure message (the offset 4 that  is  specified  by  the
+       "No match" is output only if the first match attempt fails. Here is  an
+       example  of  a  failure  message (the offset 4 that is specified by the
        offset modifier is past the end of the subject string):


            re> /xyz/
@@ -1486,7 +1487,7 @@
          Error -24 (bad offset value)


        Note that whereas patterns can be continued over several lines (a plain
-       ">" prompt is used for continuations), subject lines may  not.  However
+       ">"  prompt  is used for continuations), subject lines may not. However
        newlines can be included in a subject by means of the \n escape (or \r,
        \r\n, etc., depending on the newline sequence setting).


@@ -1494,7 +1495,7 @@
OUTPUT FROM THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION

        When the alternative matching function, pcre2_dfa_match(), is used, the
-       output  consists  of  a list of all the matches that start at the first
+       output consists of a list of all the matches that start  at  the  first
        point in the subject where there is at least one match. For example:


            re> /(tang|tangerine|tan)/
@@ -1503,11 +1504,11 @@
           1: tang
           2: tan


-       Using the normal matching function on this data finds only "tang".  The
-       longest  matching  string  is  always  given first (and numbered zero).
-       After a PCRE2_ERROR_PARTIAL return, the  output  is  "Partial  match:",
-       followed  by  the  partially  matching substring. Note that this is the
-       entire substring that was inspected during the partial  match;  it  may
+       Using  the normal matching function on this data finds only "tang". The
+       longest matching string is always  given  first  (and  numbered  zero).
+       After  a  PCRE2_ERROR_PARTIAL  return,  the output is "Partial match:",
+       followed by the partially matching substring. Note  that  this  is  the
+       entire  substring  that  was inspected during the partial match; it may
        include characters before the actual match start if a lookbehind asser-
        tion, \b, or \B was involved. (\K is not supported for DFA matching.)


@@ -1523,16 +1524,16 @@
           1: tan
           0: tan


-       The  alternative  matching function does not support substring capture,
-       so the modifiers that are concerned with captured  substrings  are  not
+       The alternative matching function does not support  substring  capture,
+       so  the  modifiers  that are concerned with captured substrings are not
        relevant.



RESTARTING AFTER A PARTIAL MATCH

-       When  the  alternative matching function has given the PCRE2_ERROR_PAR-
+       When the alternative matching function has given  the  PCRE2_ERROR_PAR-
        TIAL return, indicating that the subject partially matched the pattern,
-       you  can restart the match with additional subject data by means of the
+       you can restart the match with additional subject data by means of  the
        dfa_restart modifier. For example:


            re> /^\d?\d(jan|feb|mar|apr|may|jun|jul|aug|sep|oct|nov|dec)\d\d$/
@@ -1541,7 +1542,7 @@
          data> n05\=dfa,dfa_restart
           0: n05


-       For further information about partial matching,  see  the  pcre2partial
+       For  further  information  about partial matching, see the pcre2partial
        documentation.



@@ -1548,30 +1549,30 @@
CALLOUTS

        If the pattern contains any callout requests, pcre2test's callout func-
-       tion is called during matching unless callout_none is  specified.  This
+       tion  is  called during matching unless callout_none is specified. This
        works with both matching functions, and with JIT, though there are some
-       differences in behaviour. The output for callouts with numerical  argu-
+       differences  in behaviour. The output for callouts with numerical argu-
        ments and those with string arguments is slightly different.


    Callouts with numerical arguments


        By default, the callout function displays the callout number, the start
-       and current positions in the subject text at the callout time, and  the
+       and  current positions in the subject text at the callout time, and the
        next pattern item to be tested. For example:


          --->pqrabcdef
            0    ^  ^     \d


-       This  output  indicates  that  callout  number  0  occurred for a match
-       attempt starting at the fourth character of the  subject  string,  when
-       the  pointer  was  at  the seventh character, and when the next pattern
-       item was \d. Just one circumflex is output if  the  start  and  current
-       positions  are  the same, or if the current position precedes the start
+       This output indicates that  callout  number  0  occurred  for  a  match
+       attempt  starting  at  the fourth character of the subject string, when
+       the pointer was at the seventh character, and  when  the  next  pattern
+       item  was  \d.  Just  one circumflex is output if the start and current
+       positions are the same, or if the current position precedes  the  start
        position, which can happen if the callout is in a lookbehind assertion.


        Callouts numbered 255 are assumed to be automatic callouts, inserted as
        a result of the auto_callout pattern modifier. In this case, instead of
-       showing the callout number, the offset in the pattern,  preceded  by  a
+       showing  the  callout  number, the offset in the pattern, preceded by a
        plus, is output. For example:


            re> /\d?[A-E]\*/auto_callout
@@ -1584,7 +1585,7 @@
           0: E*


        If a pattern contains (*MARK) items, an additional line is output when-
-       ever a change of latest mark is passed to  the  callout  function.  For
+       ever  a  change  of  latest mark is passed to the callout function. For
        example:


            re> /a(*MARK:X)bc/auto_callout
@@ -1598,17 +1599,17 @@
          +12 ^  ^
           0: abc


-       The  mark  changes between matching "a" and "b", but stays the same for
-       the rest of the match, so nothing more is output. If, as  a  result  of
-       backtracking,  the  mark  reverts to being unset, the text "<unset>" is
+       The mark changes between matching "a" and "b", but stays the  same  for
+       the  rest  of  the match, so nothing more is output. If, as a result of
+       backtracking, the mark reverts to being unset, the  text  "<unset>"  is
        output.


    Callouts with string arguments


        The output for a callout with a string argument is similar, except that
-       instead  of outputting a callout number before the position indicators,
-       the callout string and its offset in  the  pattern  string  are  output
-       before  the reflection of the subject string, and the subject string is
+       instead of outputting a callout number before the position  indicators,
+       the  callout  string  and  its  offset in the pattern string are output
+       before the reflection of the subject string, and the subject string  is
        reflected for each callout. For example:


            re> /^ab(?C'first')cd(?C"second")ef/
@@ -1624,26 +1625,26 @@


    Callout modifiers


-       The callout function in pcre2test returns zero (carry on  matching)  by
-       default,  but  you can use a callout_fail modifier in a subject line to
+       The  callout  function in pcre2test returns zero (carry on matching) by
+       default, but you can use a callout_fail modifier in a subject  line  to
        change this and other parameters of the callout (see below).


        If the callout_capture modifier is set, the current captured groups are
        output when a callout occurs. This is useful only for non-DFA matching,
-       as pcre2_dfa_match() does not support capturing,  so  no  captures  are
+       as  pcre2_dfa_match()  does  not  support capturing, so no captures are
        ever shown.


        The normal callout output, showing the callout number or pattern offset
-       (as described above) is suppressed if the callout_no_where modifier  is
+       (as  described above) is suppressed if the callout_no_where modifier is
        set.


-       When  using  the  interpretive  matching function pcre2_match() without
-       JIT, setting the callout_extra modifier causes additional  output  from
-       pcre2test's  callout function to be generated. For the first callout in
-       a match attempt at a new starting position in the subject,  "New  match
-       attempt"  is output. If there has been a backtrack since the last call-
+       When using the interpretive  matching  function  pcre2_match()  without
+       JIT,  setting  the callout_extra modifier causes additional output from
+       pcre2test's callout function to be generated. For the first callout  in
+       a  match  attempt at a new starting position in the subject, "New match
+       attempt" is output. If there has been a backtrack since the last  call-
        out (or start of matching if this is the first callout), "Backtrack" is
-       output,  followed  by  "No other matching paths" if the backtrack ended
+       output, followed by "No other matching paths" if  the  backtrack  ended
        the previous match attempt. For example:


           re> /(a+)b/auto_callout,no_start_optimize,no_auto_possess
@@ -1680,39 +1681,39 @@
           +1    ^    a+
          No match


-       Notice that various optimizations must be turned off if  you  want  all
-       possible  matching  paths  to  be  scanned. If no_start_optimize is not
-       used, there is an immediate "no match", without any  callouts,  because
-       the  starting  optimization  fails to find "b" in the subject, which it
-       knows must be present for any match. If no_auto_possess  is  not  used,
-       the  "a+"  item is turned into "a++", which reduces the number of back-
+       Notice  that  various  optimizations must be turned off if you want all
+       possible matching paths to be  scanned.  If  no_start_optimize  is  not
+       used,  there  is an immediate "no match", without any callouts, because
+       the starting optimization fails to find "b" in the  subject,  which  it
+       knows  must  be  present for any match. If no_auto_possess is not used,
+       the "a+" item is turned into "a++", which reduces the number  of  back-
        tracks.


-       The callout_extra modifier has no effect if used with the DFA  matching
+       The  callout_extra modifier has no effect if used with the DFA matching
        function, or with JIT.


    Return values from callouts


-       The  default  return  from  the  callout function is zero, which allows
+       The default return from the callout  function  is  zero,  which  allows
        matching to continue. The callout_fail modifier can be given one or two
        numbers. If there is only one number, 1 is returned instead of 0 (caus-
        ing matching to backtrack) when a callout of that number is reached. If
-       two  numbers  (<n>:<m>)  are  given,  1 is returned when callout <n> is
-       reached and there have been at least <m>  callouts.  The  callout_error
+       two numbers (<n>:<m>) are given, 1 is  returned  when  callout  <n>  is
+       reached  and  there  have been at least <m> callouts. The callout_error
        modifier is similar, except that PCRE2_ERROR_CALLOUT is returned, caus-
-       ing the entire matching process to be aborted. If both these  modifiers
-       are  set  for  the same callout number, callout_error takes precedence.
-       Note that callouts with string arguments are always  given  the  number
+       ing  the entire matching process to be aborted. If both these modifiers
+       are set for the same callout number,  callout_error  takes  precedence.
+       Note  that  callouts  with string arguments are always given the number
        zero.


-       The  callout_data  modifier can be given an unsigned or a negative num-
-       ber.  This is set as the "user data" that is  passed  to  the  matching
-       function,  and  passed  back  when the callout function is invoked. Any
-       value other than zero is used as  a  return  from  pcre2test's  callout
+       The callout_data modifier can be given an unsigned or a  negative  num-
+       ber.   This  is  set  as the "user data" that is passed to the matching
+       function, and passed back when the callout  function  is  invoked.  Any
+       value  other  than  zero  is  used as a return from pcre2test's callout
        function.


        Inserting callouts can be helpful when using pcre2test to check compli-
-       cated regular expressions. For further information about callouts,  see
+       cated  regular expressions. For further information about callouts, see
        the pcre2callout documentation.



@@ -1719,47 +1720,47 @@
NON-PRINTING CHARACTERS

        When pcre2test is outputting text in the compiled version of a pattern,
-       bytes other than 32-126 are always treated as  non-printing  characters
+       bytes  other  than 32-126 are always treated as non-printing characters
        and are therefore shown as hex escapes.


-       When  pcre2test  is outputting text that is a matched part of a subject
-       string, it behaves in the same way, unless a different locale has  been
-       set  for  the  pattern  (using  the locale modifier). In this case, the
-       isprint() function is used to  distinguish  printing  and  non-printing
+       When pcre2test is outputting text that is a matched part of  a  subject
+       string,  it behaves in the same way, unless a different locale has been
+       set for the pattern (using the locale  modifier).  In  this  case,  the
+       isprint()  function  is  used  to distinguish printing and non-printing
        characters.



SAVING AND RESTORING COMPILED PATTERNS

-       It  is  possible  to  save  compiled patterns on disc or elsewhere, and
+       It is possible to save compiled patterns  on  disc  or  elsewhere,  and
        reload them later, subject to a number of restrictions. JIT data cannot
-       be  saved.  The host on which the patterns are reloaded must be running
+       be saved. The host on which the patterns are reloaded must  be  running
        the same version of PCRE2, with the same code unit width, and must also
-       have  the  same  endianness,  pointer width and PCRE2_SIZE type. Before
-       compiled patterns can be saved they must be serialized, that  is,  con-
-       verted  to a stream of bytes. A single byte stream may contain any num-
-       ber of compiled patterns, but they must  all  use  the  same  character
+       have the same endianness, pointer width  and  PCRE2_SIZE  type.  Before
+       compiled  patterns  can be saved they must be serialized, that is, con-
+       verted to a stream of bytes. A single byte stream may contain any  num-
+       ber  of  compiled  patterns,  but  they must all use the same character
        tables. A single copy of the tables is included in the byte stream (its
        size is 1088 bytes).


-       The functions whose names begin  with  pcre2_serialize_  are  used  for
-       serializing  and de-serializing. They are described in the pcre2serial-
+       The  functions  whose  names  begin  with pcre2_serialize_ are used for
+       serializing and de-serializing. They are described in the  pcre2serial-
        ize  documentation.  In  this  section  we  describe  the  features  of
        pcre2test that can be used to test these functions.


-       Note  that  "serialization" in PCRE2 does not convert compiled patterns
-       to an abstract format like Java or .NET. It  just  makes  a  reloadable
+       Note that "serialization" in PCRE2 does not convert  compiled  patterns
+       to  an  abstract  format  like Java or .NET. It just makes a reloadable
        byte code stream.  Hence the restrictions on reloading mentioned above.


-       In  pcre2test,  when  a pattern with push modifier is successfully com-
-       piled, it is pushed onto a stack of compiled  patterns,  and  pcre2test
-       expects  the next line to contain a new pattern (or command) instead of
+       In pcre2test, when a pattern with push modifier  is  successfully  com-
+       piled,  it  is  pushed onto a stack of compiled patterns, and pcre2test
+       expects the next line to contain a new pattern (or command) instead  of
        a subject line. By contrast, the pushcopy modifier causes a copy of the
-       compiled  pattern  to  be  stacked,  leaving the original available for
+       compiled pattern to be stacked,  leaving  the  original  available  for
        immediate matching. By using push and/or pushcopy, a number of patterns
-       can  be  compiled  and  retained. These modifiers are incompatible with
+       can be compiled and retained. These  modifiers  are  incompatible  with
        posix, and control modifiers that act at match time are ignored (with a
-       message)  for the stacked patterns. The jitverify modifier applies only
+       message) for the stacked patterns. The jitverify modifier applies  only
        at compile time.


        The command
@@ -1767,21 +1768,21 @@
          #save <filename>


        causes all the stacked patterns to be serialized and the result written
-       to  the named file. Afterwards, all the stacked patterns are freed. The
+       to the named file. Afterwards, all the stacked patterns are freed.  The
        command


          #load <filename>


-       reads the data in the file, and then arranges for it to  be  de-serial-
-       ized,  with the resulting compiled patterns added to the pattern stack.
-       The pattern on the top of the stack can be retrieved by the  #pop  com-
-       mand,  which  must  be  followed  by  lines  of subjects that are to be
-       matched with the pattern, terminated as usual by an empty line  or  end
-       of  file.  This  command  may be followed by a modifier list containing
-       only control modifiers that act after a pattern has been  compiled.  In
+       reads  the  data in the file, and then arranges for it to be de-serial-
+       ized, with the resulting compiled patterns added to the pattern  stack.
+       The  pattern  on the top of the stack can be retrieved by the #pop com-
+       mand, which must be followed by  lines  of  subjects  that  are  to  be
+       matched  with  the pattern, terminated as usual by an empty line or end
+       of file. This command may be followed by  a  modifier  list  containing
+       only  control  modifiers that act after a pattern has been compiled. In
        particular,  hex,  posix,  posix_nosub,  push,  and  pushcopy  are  not
-       allowed, nor are any option-setting modifiers.  The JIT modifiers  are,
-       however  permitted.  Here is an example that saves and reloads two pat-
+       allowed,  nor are any option-setting modifiers.  The JIT modifiers are,
+       however permitted. Here is an example that saves and reloads  two  pat-
        terns.


          /abc/push
@@ -1794,10 +1795,10 @@
          #pop jit,bincode
          abc


-       If jitverify is used with #pop, it does not  automatically  imply  jit,
+       If  jitverify  is  used with #pop, it does not automatically imply jit,
        which is different behaviour from when it is used on a pattern.


-       The  #popcopy  command is analagous to the pushcopy modifier in that it
+       The #popcopy command is analagous to the pushcopy modifier in  that  it
        makes current a copy of the topmost stack pattern, leaving the original
        still on the stack.


@@ -1817,5 +1818,5 @@

REVISION

-       Last updated: 27 June 2018
+       Last updated: 16 July 2018
        Copyright (c) 1997-2018 University of Cambridge.


Modified: code/trunk/perltest.sh
===================================================================
--- code/trunk/perltest.sh    2018-07-16 16:09:34 UTC (rev 966)
+++ code/trunk/perltest.sh    2018-07-17 16:00:09 UTC (rev 967)
@@ -50,6 +50,13 @@
 #   ucp                sets Perl's /u modifier
 #   utf                invoke UTF-8 functionality
 #
+# Comment lines are ignored. The #pattern command can be used to set modifiers
+# that will be added to each subsequent pattern. NOTE: this is different to
+# pcre2test where #pattern sets defaults, some of which can be overridden on
+# individual patterns. The #perltest, #forbid_utf, and #newline_default
+# commands, which are needed in the relevant pcre2test files, are ignored. Any
+# other #-command is ignored, with a warning message.
+#
 # The data lines must not have any pcre2test modifiers. Unless
 # "subject_literal" is on the pattern, data lines are processed as
 # Perl double-quoted strings, so if they contain " $ or @ characters, these
@@ -127,7 +134,26 @@
   printf "  re> " if $interact;
   last if ! ($_ = <$infile>);
   printf $outfile "$_" if ! $interact;
-  next if ($_ =~ /^\s*$/ || $_ =~ /^#/);
+  next if ($_ =~ /^\s*$/ || $_ =~ /^#[\s!]/);
+  
+  # A few of pcre2test's #-commands are supported, or just ignored. Any others
+  # cause an error.  
+   
+  if ($_ =~ /^#pattern(.*)/)
+    {
+    $extra_modifiers = $1;
+    chomp($extra_modifiers); 
+    $extra_modifiers =~ s/\s+$//;
+    next;
+    }  
+  elsif ($_ =~ /^#/)
+    {
+    if ($_ !~ /^#newline_default|^#perltest|^#forbid_utf/)    
+      {
+      printf $outfile "** Warning: #-command ignored: %s", $_;
+      }   
+    next;
+    }


$pattern = $_;

@@ -146,7 +172,8 @@

$pattern =~ /^\s*((.).*\2)(.*)$/s;
$pat = $1;
- $mod = $3;
+ $mod = "$3,$extra_modifiers";
+ $mod =~ s/^,\s*//;
$del = $2;

# The private "aftertext" modifier means "print $' afterwards".