#ifndef lint static char rcsid[] = "$Id: fileregex.c,v 1.2 1993/08/02 17:24:16 mycroft Exp $"; #endif /* not lint */ #include #include #include "regex.h" #define BYTEWIDTH 8 /* Sorry, but this is just a test program. */ #define LINE_MAX 500 int main (argc, argv) int argc; char *argv[]; { FILE *f; char *filename; char pat[500]; /* Sorry for that maximum size, too. */ char line[LINE_MAX]; struct re_pattern_buffer buf; char fastmap[(1 << BYTEWIDTH)]; const char *compile_ret; unsigned lineno = 1; unsigned nfound = 0; /* Actually, it might be useful to allow the data file to be standard input, and to specify the pattern on the command line. */ if (argc != 2) { fprintf (stderr, "Usage: %s .\n", argv[0]); exit (1); } filename = argv[1]; f = fopen (filename, "r"); if (f == NULL) perror (filename); buf.allocated = 0; buf.buffer = NULL; buf.fastmap = fastmap; printf ("Pattern = ", pat); gets (pat); if (feof (stdin)) { putchar ('\n'); exit (0); } compile_ret = re_compile_pattern (pat, strlen (pat), &buf); if (compile_ret != NULL) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: %s\n", pat, compile_ret); exit (1); } while (fgets (line, LINE_MAX, f) != NULL) { size_t len = strlen (line); struct re_registers regs; int search_ret = re_search_2 (&buf, NULL, 0, line, len, 0, len, ®s, len); if (search_ret == -2) { fprintf (stderr, "%s:%d: re_search failed.\n", filename, lineno); exit (1); } nfound += search_ret != -1; lineno++; } printf ("Matches found: %u (out of %u lines).\n", nfound, lineno - 1); return 0; }