Name Description Size
interval.rs 22364
literal.rs ! Provides literal extraction from `Hir` expressions. An [`Extractor`] pulls literals out of [`Hir`] expressions and returns a [`Seq`] of [`Literal`]s. The purpose of literal extraction is generally to provide avenues for optimizing regex searches. The main idea is that substring searches can be an order of magnitude faster than a regex search. Therefore, if one can execute a substring search to find candidate match locations and only run the regex search at those locations, then it is possible for huge improvements in performance to be realized. With that said, literal optimizations are generally a black art because even though substring search is generally faster, if the number of candidates produced is high, then it can create a lot of overhead by ping-ponging between the substring search and the regex search. Here are some heuristics that might be used to help increase the chances of effective literal optimizations: Stick to small [`Seq`]s. If you search for too many literals, it's likely to lead to substring search that is only a little faster than a regex search, and thus the overhead of using literal optimizations in the first place might make things slower overall. The literals in your [`Seq`] shouldn't be too short. In general, longer is better. A sequence corresponding to single bytes that occur frequently in the haystack, for example, is probably a bad literal optimization because it's likely to produce many false positive candidates. Longer literals are less likely to match, and thus probably produce fewer false positives. If it's possible to estimate the approximate frequency of each byte according to some pre-computed background distribution, it is possible to compute a score of how "good" a `Seq` is. If a `Seq` isn't good enough, you might consider skipping the literal optimization and just use the regex engine. (It should be noted that there are always pathological cases that can make any kind of literal optimization be a net slower result. This is why it might be a good idea to be conservative, or to even provide a means for literal optimizations to be dynamically disabled if they are determined to be ineffective according to some measure.) You're encouraged to explore the methods on [`Seq`], which permit shrinking the size of sequences in a preference-order preserving fashion. Finally, note that it isn't strictly necessary to use an [`Extractor`]. Namely, an `Extractor` only uses public APIs of the [`Seq`] and [`Literal`] types, so it is possible to implement your own extractor. For example, for n-grams or "inner" literals (i.e., not prefix or suffix literals). The `Extractor` is mostly responsible for the case analysis over `Hir` expressions. Much of the "trickier" parts are how to combine literal sequences, and that is all implemented on [`Seq`]. 115883
mod.rs ! Defines a high-level intermediate (HIR) representation for regular expressions. The HIR is represented by the [`Hir`] type, and it principally constructed via [translation](translate) from an [`Ast`](crate::ast::Ast). Alternatively, users may use the smart constructors defined on `Hir` to build their own by hand. The smart constructors simultaneously simplify and "optimize" the HIR, and are also the same routines used by translation. Most regex engines only have an HIR like this, and usually construct it directly from the concrete syntax. This crate however first parses the concrete syntax into an `Ast`, and only then creates the HIR from the `Ast`, as mentioned above. It's done this way to facilitate better error reporting, and to have a structured representation of a regex that faithfully represents its concrete syntax. Namely, while an `Hir` value can be converted back to an equivalent regex pattern string, it is unlikely to look like the original due to its simplified structure. 142144
print.rs ! This module provides a regular expression printer for `Hir`. 20901
translate.rs ! Defines a translator that converts an `Ast` to an `Hir`. 124212
visitor.rs 7892