Change Log for PCRE2 -------------------- Version 10.00 05-January-2015 ----------------------------- Version 10.00 is the first release of PCRE2, a revised API for the PCRE library. Changes prior to 10.00 are logged in the ChangeLog file for the old API, up to item 20 for release 8.36. The code of the library was heavily revised as part of the new API implementation. Details of each and every modification were not individually logged. In addition to the API changes, the following changes were made. They are either new functionality, or bug fixes and other noticeable changes of behaviour that were implemented after the code had been forked. 1. Unicode support is now enabled by default, but it can optionally be disabled. 2. The test program, now called pcre2test, was re-specified and almost completely re-written. Its input is not compatible with input for pcretest. 3. Patterns may start with (*NOTEMPTY) or (*NOTEMPTY_ATSTART) to set the PCRE2_NOTEMPTY or PCRE2_NOTEMPTY_ATSTART options for every subject line that is matched by that pattern. 4. For the benefit of those who use PCRE2 via some other application, that is, not writing the function calls themselves, it is possible to check the PCRE2 version by matching a pattern such as /(?(VERSION>=10)yes|no)/ against a string such as "yesno". 5. There are case-equivalent Unicode characters whose encodings use different numbers of code units in UTF-8. U+023A and U+2C65 are one example. (It is theoretically possible for this to happen in UTF-16 too.) If a backreference to a group containing one of these characters was greedily repeated, and during the match a backtrack occurred, the subject might be backtracked by the wrong number of code units. For example, if /^(\x{23a})\1*(.)/ is matched caselessly (and in UTF-8 mode) against "\x{23a}\x{2c65}\x{2c65}\x{2c65}", group 2 should capture the final character, which is the three bytes E2, B1, and A5 in UTF-8. Incorrect backtracking meant that group 2 captured only the last two bytes. This bug has been fixed; the new code is slower, but it is used only when the strings matched by the repetition are not all the same length. 6. A pattern such as /()a/ was not setting the "first character must be 'a'" information. This applied to any pattern with a group that matched no characters, for example: /(?:(?=.)|(?