pub enum SparseDFA<T: AsRef<[u8]>, S: StateID = usize> {
    Standard(Standard<T, S>),
    ByteClass(ByteClass<T, S>),
    // some variants omitted
}
Expand description

A sparse table-based deterministic finite automaton (DFA).

In contrast to a dense DFA, a sparse DFA uses a more space efficient representation for its transition table. Consequently, sparse DFAs can use much less memory than dense DFAs, but this comes at a price. In particular, reading the more space efficient transitions takes more work, and consequently, searching using a sparse DFA is typically slower than a dense DFA.

A sparse DFA can be built using the default configuration via the SparseDFA::new constructor. Otherwise, one can configure various aspects of a dense DFA via dense::Builder, and then convert a dense DFA to a sparse DFA using DenseDFA::to_sparse.

In general, a sparse DFA supports all the same operations as a dense DFA.

Making the choice between a dense and sparse DFA depends on your specific work load. If you can sacrifice a bit of search time performance, then a sparse DFA might be the best choice. In particular, while sparse DFAs are probably always slower than dense DFAs, you may find that they are easily fast enough for your purposes!

State size

A SparseDFA has two type parameters, T and S. T corresponds to the type of the DFA’s transition table while S corresponds to the representation used for the DFA’s state identifiers as described by the StateID trait. This type parameter is typically usize, but other valid choices provided by this crate include u8, u16, u32 and u64. The primary reason for choosing a different state identifier representation than the default is to reduce the amount of memory used by a DFA. Note though, that if the chosen representation cannot accommodate the size of your DFA, then building the DFA will fail and return an error.

While the reduction in heap memory used by a DFA is one reason for choosing a smaller state identifier representation, another possible reason is for decreasing the serialization size of a DFA, as returned by to_bytes_little_endian, to_bytes_big_endian or to_bytes_native_endian.

The type of the transition table is typically either Vec<u8> or &[u8], depending on where the transition table is stored. Note that this is different than a dense DFA, whose transition table is typically Vec<S> or &[S]. The reason for this is that a sparse DFA always reads its transition table from raw bytes because the table is compactly packed.

Variants

This DFA is defined as a non-exhaustive enumeration of different types of dense DFAs. All of the variants use the same internal representation for the transition table, but they vary in how the transition table is read. A DFA’s specific variant depends on the configuration options set via dense::Builder. The default variant is ByteClass.

The DFA trait

This type implements the DFA trait, which means it can be used for searching. For example:

use regex_automata::{DFA, SparseDFA};

let dfa = SparseDFA::new("foo[0-9]+")?;
assert_eq!(Some(8), dfa.find(b"foo12345"));

The DFA trait also provides an assortment of other lower level methods for DFAs, such as start_state and next_state. While these are correctly implemented, it is an anti-pattern to use them in performance sensitive code on the SparseDFA type directly. Namely, each implementation requires a branch to determine which type of sparse DFA is being used. Instead, this branch should be pushed up a layer in the code since walking the transitions of a DFA is usually a hot path. If you do need to use these lower level methods in performance critical code, then you should match on the variants of this DFA and use each variant’s implementation of the DFA trait directly.

Variants§

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Standard(Standard<T, S>)

A standard DFA that does not use byte classes.

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ByteClass(ByteClass<T, S>)

A DFA that shrinks its alphabet to a set of equivalence classes instead of using all possible byte values. Any two bytes belong to the same equivalence class if and only if they can be used interchangeably anywhere in the DFA while never discriminating between a match and a non-match.

Unlike dense DFAs, sparse DFAs do not tend to benefit nearly as much from using byte classes. In some cases, using byte classes can even marginally increase the size of a sparse DFA’s transition table. The reason for this is that a sparse DFA already compacts each state’s transitions separate from whether byte classes are used.

Implementations§

Parse the given regular expression using a default configuration and return the corresponding sparse DFA.

The default configuration uses usize for state IDs and reduces the alphabet size by splitting bytes into equivalence classes. The resulting DFA is not minimized.

If you want a non-default configuration, then use the dense::Builder to set your own configuration, and then call DenseDFA::to_sparse to create a sparse DFA.

Example
use regex_automata::{DFA, SparseDFA};

let dfa = SparseDFA::new("foo[0-9]+bar")?;
assert_eq!(Some(11), dfa.find(b"foo12345bar"));

Create a new empty sparse DFA that never matches any input.

Example

In order to build an empty DFA, callers must provide a type hint indicating their choice of state identifier representation.

use regex_automata::{DFA, SparseDFA};

let dfa: SparseDFA<Vec<u8>, usize> = SparseDFA::empty();
assert_eq!(None, dfa.find(b""));
assert_eq!(None, dfa.find(b"foo"));

Cheaply return a borrowed version of this sparse DFA. Specifically, the DFA returned always uses &[u8] for its transition table while keeping the same state identifier representation.

Return an owned version of this sparse DFA. Specifically, the DFA returned always uses Vec<u8> for its transition table while keeping the same state identifier representation.

Effectively, this returns a sparse DFA whose transition table lives on the heap.

Returns the memory usage, in bytes, of this DFA.

The memory usage is computed based on the number of bytes used to represent this DFA’s transition table. This typically corresponds to heap memory usage.

This does not include the stack size used up by this DFA. To compute that, used std::mem::size_of::<SparseDFA>().

Routines for converting a sparse DFA to other representations, such as smaller state identifiers or raw bytes suitable for persistent storage.

Create a new sparse DFA whose match semantics are equivalent to this DFA, but attempt to use u8 for the representation of state identifiers. If u8 is insufficient to represent all state identifiers in this DFA, then this returns an error.

This is a convenience routine for to_sized::<u8>().

Create a new sparse DFA whose match semantics are equivalent to this DFA, but attempt to use u16 for the representation of state identifiers. If u16 is insufficient to represent all state identifiers in this DFA, then this returns an error.

This is a convenience routine for to_sized::<u16>().

Create a new sparse DFA whose match semantics are equivalent to this DFA, but attempt to use u32 for the representation of state identifiers. If u32 is insufficient to represent all state identifiers in this DFA, then this returns an error.

This is a convenience routine for to_sized::<u32>().

Create a new sparse DFA whose match semantics are equivalent to this DFA, but attempt to use u64 for the representation of state identifiers. If u64 is insufficient to represent all state identifiers in this DFA, then this returns an error.

This is a convenience routine for to_sized::<u64>().

Create a new sparse DFA whose match semantics are equivalent to this DFA, but attempt to use A for the representation of state identifiers. If A is insufficient to represent all state identifiers in this DFA, then this returns an error.

An alternative way to construct such a DFA is to use DenseDFA::to_sparse_sized. In general, picking the appropriate size upon initial construction of a sparse DFA is preferred, since it will do the conversion in one step instead of two.

Serialize a sparse DFA to raw bytes in little endian format.

If the state identifier representation of this DFA has a size different than 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes, then this returns an error. All implementations of StateID provided by this crate satisfy this requirement.

Serialize a sparse DFA to raw bytes in big endian format.

If the state identifier representation of this DFA has a size different than 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes, then this returns an error. All implementations of StateID provided by this crate satisfy this requirement.

Serialize a sparse DFA to raw bytes in native endian format. Generally, it is better to pick an explicit endianness using either to_bytes_little_endian or to_bytes_big_endian. This routine is useful in tests where the DFA is serialized and deserialized on the same platform.

If the state identifier representation of this DFA has a size different than 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes, then this returns an error. All implementations of StateID provided by this crate satisfy this requirement.

Deserialize a sparse DFA with a specific state identifier representation.

Deserializing a DFA using this routine will never allocate heap memory. This is also guaranteed to be a constant time operation that does not vary with the size of the DFA.

The bytes given should be generated by the serialization of a DFA with either the to_bytes_little_endian method or the to_bytes_big_endian endian, depending on the endianness of the machine you are deserializing this DFA from.

If the state identifier representation is usize, then deserialization is dependent on the pointer size. For this reason, it is best to serialize DFAs using a fixed size representation for your state identifiers, such as u8, u16, u32 or u64.

Panics

The bytes given should be trusted. In particular, if the bytes are not a valid serialization of a DFA, or if the endianness of the serialized bytes is different than the endianness of the machine that is deserializing the DFA, then this routine will panic. Moreover, it is possible for this deserialization routine to succeed even if the given bytes do not represent a valid serialized sparse DFA.

Safety

This routine is unsafe because it permits callers to provide an arbitrary transition table with possibly incorrect transitions. While the various serialization routines will never return an incorrect transition table, there is no guarantee that the bytes provided here are correct. While deserialization does many checks (as documented above in the panic conditions), this routine does not check that the transition table is correct. Given an incorrect transition table, it is possible for the search routines to access out-of-bounds memory because of explicit bounds check elision.

Example

This example shows how to serialize a DFA to raw bytes, deserialize it and then use it for searching. Note that we first convert the DFA to using u16 for its state identifier representation before serializing it. While this isn’t strictly necessary, it’s good practice in order to decrease the size of the DFA and to avoid platform specific pitfalls such as differing pointer sizes.

use regex_automata::{DFA, DenseDFA, SparseDFA};

let sparse = SparseDFA::new("foo[0-9]+")?;
let bytes = sparse.to_u16()?.to_bytes_native_endian()?;

let dfa: SparseDFA<&[u8], u16> = unsafe {
    SparseDFA::from_bytes(&bytes)
};

assert_eq!(Some(8), dfa.find(b"foo12345"));

Trait Implementations§

Returns a copy of the value. Read more
Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more
The representation used for state identifiers in this DFA. Read more
Return the identifier of this DFA’s start state.
Returns true if and only if the given identifier corresponds to a match state. Read more
Returns true if and only if the given identifier corresponds to a dead state. When a DFA enters a dead state, it is impossible to leave and thus can never lead to a match. Read more
Returns true if and only if the given identifier corresponds to either a dead state or a match state, such that one of is_match_state(id) or is_dead_state(id) must return true. Read more
Returns true if and only if this DFA is anchored. Read more
Given the current state that this DFA is in and the next input byte, this method returns the identifier of the next state. The identifier returned is always valid, but it may correspond to a dead state. Read more
Like next_state, but its implementation may look up the next state without memory safety checks such as bounds checks. As such, callers must ensure that the given identifier corresponds to a valid DFA state. Implementors must, in turn, ensure that this routine is safe for all valid state identifiers and for all possible u8 values. Read more
Returns the same as is_match, but starts the search at the given offset. Read more
Returns the same as shortest_match, but starts the search at the given offset. Read more
Returns the same as find, but starts the search at the given offset. Read more
Returns the same as rfind, but starts the search at the given offset. Read more
Returns true if and only if the given bytes match this DFA. Read more
Returns the first position at which a match is found. Read more
Returns the end offset of the longest match. If no match exists, then None is returned. Read more
Returns the start offset of the longest match in reverse, by searching from the end of the input towards the start of the input. If no match exists, then None is returned. In other words, this has the same match semantics as find, but in reverse. Read more
Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

Auto Trait Implementations§

Blanket Implementations§

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more
Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Returns the argument unchanged.

Calls U::from(self).

That is, this conversion is whatever the implementation of From<T> for U chooses to do.

The resulting type after obtaining ownership.
Creates owned data from borrowed data, usually by cloning. Read more
Uses borrowed data to replace owned data, usually by cloning. Read more
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
Performs the conversion.
The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
Performs the conversion.