Thanks to the folks who replied. Indeed, I misunderstood the "longest match" rule to apply to captures and not just the whole string. (That is, I thought an earlier capture would get "first dibs" on any matching text.) And, as was pointed out by Greg W, the exact behavior depends more on the regex library that Bash got linked with than anything that Bash inherently does.
Thanks again, and sorry for the noise. -dan On Thu, Oct 26, 2023, at 10:50 AM, Dan Bornstein wrote: > Configuration Information [Automatically generated, do not change]: > Machine: aarch64 > OS: linux-gnu > Compiler: gcc > Compilation CFLAGS: -O2 -ftree-vectorize -flto=auto -ffat-lto-objects > -fexcepti\ > ons -g -grecord-gcc-switches -pipe -Wall -Werror=format-security > -Wp,-D_FORTIFY\ > _SOURCE=2 -Wp,-D_GLIBCXX_ASSERTIONS > -specs=/usr/lib/rpm/redhat/redhat-hardened-\ > cc1 -fstack-protector-strong -specs=/usr/lib/rpm/redhat/redhat-annobin-cc1 > -ma\ > rch=armv8.2-a+crypto -mtune=neoverse-n1 -mbranch-protection=standard > -fasynchro\ > nous-unwind-tables -fstack-clash-protection > uname output: Linux i-062640626b26bd9ed.us-west-2.compute.internal > 6.1.25-37.47\ > .amzn2023.aarch64 #1 SMP Mon Apr 24 23:19:51 UTC 2023 aarch64 aarch64 aarch64 > G\ > NU/Linux > Machine Type: aarch64-amazon-linux-gnu > > Bash Version: 5.2 > Patch Level: 15 > Release Status: release > > Description: > > I found a case where the regex evaluator doesn't seem to be finding the > longest possible match for a given expression. The expression works as > expected on an older version of Bash (3.2.57(1)-release > (arm64-apple-darwin22)). > > Here's the regex: ^(\$\'([^\']|\\\')*\')(.*)$ > > (FWIW, this is meant to capture a string that looks like an ANSI-style > literal string, plus a "rest" for further processing.) > > Repeat-By: > > For example, run this: > > [[ $'$\'foo\\\' x\' bar' =~ ^(\$\'([^\']|\\\')*\')(.*)$ ]] && echo > "${BASH_REMATCH[1]}" > > On v5.2, this prints: $'foo\' > On v3.2.57, this prints: $'foo\' x' > >