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wildmat.c
Package: export.zip [view]
Upload User: hepax88
Upload Date: 2007-01-03
Package Size: 1101k
Code Size: 4k
Category:
TCP/IP Stack
Development Platform:
Visual C++
- /*
- * @(#)wildmat.c 1.3 87/11/06 Public Domain.
- *
- From: rs@mirror.TMC.COM (Rich Salz)
- Newsgroups: net.sources
- Subject: Small shell-style pattern matcher
- Message-ID: <596@mirror.TMC.COM>
- Date: 27 Nov 86 00:06:40 GMT
- There have been several regular-expression subroutines and one or two
- filename-globbing routines in mod.sources. They handle lots of
- complicated patterns. This small piece of code handles the *?[]
- wildcard characters the way the standard Unix(tm) shells do, with the
- addition that "[^.....]" is an inverse character class -- it matches
- any character not in the range ".....". Read the comments for more
- info.
- For my application, I had first ripped off a copy of the "glob" routine
- from within the find(1) source, but that code is bad news: it recurses
- on every character in the pattern. I'm putting this replacement in the
- public domain. It's small, tight, and iterative. Compile with -DTEST
- to get a test driver. After you're convinced it works, install in
- whatever way is appropriate for you.
- I would like to hear of bugs, but am not interested in additions; if I
- were, I'd use the code I mentioned above.
- */
- /*
- ** Do shell-style pattern matching for ?, , [], and * characters.
- ** Might not be robust in face of malformed patterns; e.g., "foo[a-"
- ** could cause a segmentation violation.
- **
- ** Written by Rich $alz, mirror!rs, Wed Nov 26 19:03:17 EST 1986.
- */
- /*
- * Modified 6Nov87 by John Gilmore (hoptoad!gnu) to return a "match"
- * if the pattern is immediately followed by a "/", as well as .
- * This matches what "tar" does for matching whole subdirectories.
- *
- * The "*" code could be sped up by only recursing one level instead
- * of two for each trial pattern, perhaps, and not recursing at all
- * if a literal match of the next 2 chars would fail.
- */
- /* Modified by Anders Klemets to take an array of pointers as an optional
- argument. Each part of the string that matches '*' is returned as a
- null-terminated, malloced string in this array.
- */
- #include "global.h"
- static int Star(char *s,char *p,char **argv);
- static int
- Star(s,p,argv)
- register char *s;
- register char *p;
- register char **argv;
- {
- char *cp = s;
- while (wildmat(cp, p, argv) == FALSE)
- if(*++cp == '')
- return -1;
- return cp - s;
- }
- int
- wildmat(s,p,argv)
- register char *s;
- register char *p;
- register char **argv;
- {
- register int last;
- register int matched;
- register int reverse;
- register int cnt;
- for(; *p; s++,p++){
- switch(*p){
- case '\':
- /* Literal match with following character; fall through. */
- p++;
- default:
- if(*s != *p)
- return FALSE;
- continue;
- case '?':
- /* Match anything. */
- if(*s == '')
- return FALSE;
- continue;
- case '*':
- /* Trailing star matches everything. */
- if(argv == NULL)
- return *++p ? 1 + Star(s, p, NULL) : TRUE;
- if(*++p == ''){
- cnt = strlen(s);
- } else {
- if((cnt = Star(s, p, argv+1)) == -1)
- return FALSE;
- }
- *argv = mallocw(cnt+1);
- strncpy(*argv,s,cnt);
- *(*argv + cnt) = '';
- return TRUE;
- case '[':
- /* [^....] means inverse character class. */
- reverse = (p[1] == '^') ? TRUE : FALSE;
- if(reverse)
- p++;
- for(last = 0400, matched = FALSE; *++p && *p != ']'; last = *p){
- /* This next line requires a good C compiler. */
- if(*p == '-' ? *s <= *++p && *s >= last : *s == *p)
- matched = TRUE;
- }
- if(matched == reverse)
- return FALSE;
- continue;
- }
- }
- /* For "tar" use, matches that end at a slash also work. --hoptoad!gnu */
- return *s == '' || *s == '/';
- }
- #ifdef TEST
- #include <stdio.h>
- extern char *gets();
- main()
- {
- char pattern[80];
- char text[80];
- char *argv[80], *cp;
- int cnt;
- while (TRUE){
- printf("Enter pattern: ");
- if(gets(pattern) == NULL)
- break;
- while (TRUE){
- bzero(argv,80*sizeof(char *);
- printf("Enter text: ");
- if(gets(text) == NULL)
- exit(0);
- if(text[0] == '')
- /* Blank line; go back and get a new pattern. */
- break;
- printf(" %dn", wildmat(text, pattern, argv);
- for(cnt = 0; argv[cnt] != NULL; ++cnt){
- printf("String %d is: '%s'n",cnt,argv[cnt]);
- free(argv[cnt]);
- }
- }
- }
- exit(0);
- }
- #endif /* TEST */