Hi Tom,

Following example does not work as expected:

-- Should return TRUE but returning FALSE
SELECT 'Programmer' ~ '(\w).*?\1' as t;

-- Should return P, a and er i.e. 3 rows but returning just one row with
-- value Programmer
SELECT REGEXP_SPLIT_TO_TABLE('Programmer','(\w).*?\1');

Initially I thought that back-reference is not supported and thus we are
getting those result. But while trying few cases related to back-reference I
see that it is giving an error "invalid back-reference number", it means we
do have support for back-reference. So I tried few more scenarios. And I
observed that if we have input string as 'rogrammer' we are getting perfect
results i.e. when very first character is back-referenced. But failing when
first character is not part of back-reference.

This is happening only for shorter pattern matching. Longer match '(\w).*\1'
works well.

Clearly, above example has two matching pattern 'rogr' and 'mm'.

So I started debugging it to get a root cause for this. It is too complex to
understand what exactly is happening here. But while debugging I got this
chunk in regexec.c:cfindloop() function from where we are returning with
REG_NOMATCH

               {
                   /* no point in trying again */
                   *coldp = cold;
                   return REG_NOMATCH;
               }

It was starting at 'P' and ending in above block. It was strange that why it
is not continuing with next character i.e. from 'r'. So I replaced above
chunk with break statement so that it will continue from next character.
This trick worked well.

Since I have very little idea at this code area, I myself unsure that it is
indeed a correct fix. And thus thought of mailing on hackers.

I have attached patch which does above changes along with few tests in
regex.sql

Your valuable insights please...

Thanks
-- 
Jeevan B Chalke

Attachment: regexp_backref_shorter.patch
Description: Binary data

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