I was parsing stackoverflow dump and came up on this seemingly innocent question with small, almost invisible detail that it has 22311 spaces at the end of text.
I'm using std::regex (somehow they work better for me than boost::regex) to replace all continuous whitespaces with single space like this:
std::regex space_regex("\\s+", std::regex::optimize);
...
std::regex_replace(out, in, in + strlen(in), space_regex, " ");
SIGSEGV shows up and I have begun to investigate.
Test code:
#include <regex>
...
std::regex r("\\s+", std::regex::optimize);
const char* bomb2 = "Small text\n\nwith several\n\nlines.";
std::string test(bomb2);
for (auto i = 0; i < N; ++i) test += " ";
std::string out = std::regex_replace(test.c_str(), r, " ");
std::cout << out << std::endl;
for (gcc 5.3.0)
$ g++ -O3 -std=c++14 regex-test.cpp -o regex-test.out
maximum N
before SIGSEGV shows up is 21818 (for this particular string), and for
$ g++ -O0 -std=c++14 regex-test.cpp -o regex-test.out
it's 12180.
'Ok, let's try clang, it's trending and aims to replace gcc' - never have I been so wrong. With -O0
clang (v. 3.7.1) crashes on 9696 spaces - less then gcc, but not much, yet with -O3
and even with -O2
it crashes on ZERO spaces.
Crash dump presents huge stacktraces (35k frames) of recursive calls of
std::__detail::_Executor<char*, std::allocator<std::__cxx11::sub_match<char*> >, std::__cxx11::regex_traits<char>, true>::_M_dfs
Question 1: Is this a bug? If so, should I report it?
Question 2: Is there smart way to overcome the problem (other than increasing system stack size, trying other regex libraries and writing own function to replace whitespaces)?
Amendment: bug report created for libstdc++
Yes this is a bug.
cout << '"' << regex_replace("Small text\n\nwith several\n\nlines." + string(22311, ' '), regex("\\s+", regex::optimize), " ") << '"' << endl;
This has been bugged in libstdc++ here.
If you're asking for a new regex
that works, I've tried a handful of different versions, and all of them fail on libstdc++, so I'd say, if you want to use a regex
to solve this, you'll need to compile against libc++.
But honestly if you're using a regex
to strip duplicate white space, "Now you have two problems"
A better solution could use adjacent_find
which runs fine with libstdc++ as well:
const auto func = [](const char a, const char b){ return isspace(a) && isspace(b); };
for(auto it = adjacent_find(begin(test), end(test), func); it != end(test); it = adjacent_find(it, end(test), func)) {
*it = ' ';
it = test.erase(next(it), find_if_not(next(it), end(test), [](const auto& i) { return isspace(i); }));
}
This will return the same thing your regex
would:
"Small text with several lines. "
But if you're going for simplicity, you could also use unique
:
test.resize(distance(test.begin(), unique(test.begin(), test.end(), [](const auto& a, const auto& b) { return isspace(a) && isspace(b); })));
Which will return:
"Small text
with several
lines. "
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With