When you are finished using a compiled regular expression, you can
free the storage it uses by calling regfree.
regfree frees all the storage that *compiled
points to. This includes various internal fields of the regex_t
structure that aren't documented in this manual.
regfree does not free the object *compiled itself.
You should always free the space in a regex_t structure with
regfree before using the structure to compile another regular
expression.
When regcomp or regexec reports an error, you can use
the function regerror to turn it into an error message string.
regcomp or
regexec was working with when it got the error. Alternatively,
you can supply NULL for compiled; you will still get a
meaningful error message, but it might not be as detailed.
If the error message can't fit in length bytes (including a
terminating null character), then regerror truncates it.
The string that regerror stores is always null-terminated
even if it has been truncated.
The return value of regerror is the minimum length needed to
store the entire error message. If this is less than length, then
the error message was not truncated, and you can use it. Otherwise, you
should call regerror again with a larger buffer.
Here is a function which uses regerror, but always dynamically
allocates a buffer for the error message:
char *get_regerror (int errcode, regex_t *compiled)
{
size_t length = regerror (errcode, compiled, NULL, 0);
char *buffer = xmalloc (length);
(void) regerror (errcode, compiled, buffer, length);
return buffer;
}
Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.