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fnmatch(3C)


fnmatch, _fnmcomp, _fnmexec, _fnmfree -- match filename against pattern

Synopsis

#include <fnmatch.h>

int fnmatch(const char *pattern, const char *string, int flags);

int _fnmcomp(fnm_t *pfnm, const unsigned char *pattern, int flags);

int _fnmexec(fnm_t *pfnm, const unsigned char *string);

void _fnmfree(fnm_t *pfnm);

Description

fnmatch checks string to see if it matches the pattern specified by pattern. It is essentially equivalent to a call to _fnmcomp, which, if that succeeds, is then followed by a call to _fnmexec and then _fnmfree. Its return value is the same as _fnmcomp if that function fails; otherwise its return value is that of _fnmexec.

Data type

The data type fnm_t is a structure containing at least the following members:

size_t fnm_nsub; /* number of subexpressions */
ssize_t fnm_so[FNM_NSUBEXPR]; /* (sub)expression starting offsets */
ssize_t fnm_eo[FNM_NSUBEXPR]; /* (sub)expression ending offsets */
These structure members are set by _fnmcomp or _fnmexec and only when the FNM_SUBEXPR flag is set; otherwise, their values are indeterminate. FNM_NSUBEXPR is at least 10 so that back references ``\1'' through ``\9'' can be handled.

Flags

flags is the bitwise inclusive OR of zero or more of the flags defined in the fnmatch.h header. It modifies the interpretation of pattern and string. The following flags can be set:

FNM_PATHNAME
If set, a slash (/) character in string must be matched by an explicit slash in pattern, and will not be matched by meta characters such as an asterisk. If FNM_PATHNAME is not set, the slash character is treated as an ordinary character.

FNM_NOESCAPE
If set, a backslash character is treated as an ordinary character. If FNM_NOESCAPE is not set, a backslash character in pattern will match the next character as an ordinary character unless the next character is the null character, or is a slash and either FNM_PATHNAME or FNM_COMPONENT is set, or is a digit and FNM_EXTENDED is set. In particular, ``\\'' will match a backslash in string.

FNM_PERIOD
If set, a leading period in string must be matched by an explicit period in pattern where the location of ``leading'' is indicated by the value of FNM_PATHNAME: If FNM_PERIOD is not set, a period is treated as an ordinary character.

FNM_BADRANGE
If set, an out-of-order range within brackets will silently be taken as if only the end points were specified (so a [m-a] will behave like [ma]); otherwise, the pattern will fail to compile and FNM_BADPAT will be returned.

FNM_EXTENDED
If set, all ksh pattern matching extensions will be accepted; otherwise, just the basic meta characters of *, ?, and brackets will be special. These extensions include back references, so a pattern like a@(xyz)b\1c will match the string axyzbxyzc, assuming that FNM_NOESCAPE is not set.

FNM_BKTESCAPE
If set, backslashes within brackets will quote the next character; otherwise, backslashes are not special within brackets.

FNM_REUSE
If set, the fnm_t structure whose address is passed to _fnmcomp must have been set by a previous call to _fnmcomp without an intervening call to _fnmfree. This allows for greater efficiency when compiling and matching against a series of patterns. If FNM_REUSE is not set, the fnm_t structure is assumed to be uninitialized.

FNM_COMPONENT
If set, a slash character in pattern will end the pattern to be matched against, the same as if the terminating null character were reached. Otherwise, slash characters do not end the pattern.

FNM_UNANCHORED
If set, the match need not include the start of string; otherwise, it must.

FNM_RETMIN,
FNM_RETMAX
If either of these is set, a successful match does not have to reach the end of the string; otherwise, a successful match must include the end of the string. These two differ in that FNM_RETMIN will return after finding the shortest valid match, while FNM_RETMAX will return with the longest. If either of these are set, the length of the matched portion of string is returned, which can be zero. When neither is set, a successful match is always indicated by a zero return from _fnmexec. In all cases, a negative return from _fnmexec indicates an unsuccessful match. Note that combining FNM_UNANCHORED with either FNM_RETMIN or FNM_RETMAX severely restricts the utility of the length-of-match return value.

FNM_SUBEXPR
If set, after a successful _fnmcomp, fnm_nsub will indicate the number of subexpressions found in the pattern, and after a successful match, the fnm_so and fnm_eo arrays in the fnm_t structure will be set to indicate the start and end offsets into the matched string for the entire match (index zero) and the first FNM_NSUBEXPR-1 pattern subexpressions (indices one through FNM_NSUBEXPR-1). Note that there are only subexpressions in the pattern when FNM_EXTENDED is set and that the array elements with indices greater than fnm_nsub have indeterminate values. An offset value of zero indicates the start of the string; a negative offset value indicates a failure to match that subexpression. If FNM_SUBEXPR is not set, the value of fnm_nsub and the values in these arrays are indeterminate, even after a successful compile or match.

Return values

fnmatch and _fnmexec return zero (or a nonnegative value if FNM_RETMIN or FNM_RETMAX was set) if string matches the compiled pattern. If there is no match, they return a negative value: FNM_NOMATCH.

_fnmcomp returns zero if it successfully compiled pattern; otherwise it returns a negative value such as FNM_BADPAT which indicates a malformed pattern.

Usage

The name fnmatch indicates that this function is intended to match filenames rather than pathnames. With FNM_PATHNAME, fnmatch matches pathnames, but without tilde expansion, or parameter expansion.

Applications that make heavy use of fnmatch will most likely run much more efficiently by using the underlying separate compile and match functions.

References

fnmatch(5), glob(3C), wordexp(3C)


© 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004