RegexCompilationInfo.MatchTimeout Property
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Gets or sets the regular expression's default time-out interval.
public:
property TimeSpan MatchTimeout { TimeSpan get(); void set(TimeSpan value); };
public TimeSpan MatchTimeout { get; set; }
member this.MatchTimeout : TimeSpan with get, set
Public Property MatchTimeout As TimeSpan
Property Value
The default maximum time interval that can elapse in a pattern-matching operation before a RegexMatchTimeoutException is thrown, or InfiniteMatchTimeout if time-outs are disabled.
Examples
The following example defines a single compiled regular expression named DuplicateChars
that identifies two or more occurrences of the same character in an input string. The compiled regular expression has a default time-out of 2 seconds. When you execute the example, it creates a class library named RegexLib.dll that contains the compiled regular expression.
using System;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
// Match two or more occurrences of the same character.
string pattern = @"(\w)\1+";
// Use case-insensitive matching.
var rci = new RegexCompilationInfo(pattern, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase,
"DuplicateChars", "CustomRegexes",
true, TimeSpan.FromSeconds(2));
// Define an assembly to contain the compiled regular expression.
var an = new AssemblyName();
an.Name = "RegexLib";
RegexCompilationInfo[] rciList = { rci };
// Compile the regular expression and create the assembly.
Regex.CompileToAssembly(rciList, an);
}
}
Imports System.Reflection
Imports System.Text.RegularExpressions
Module Example
Public Sub Main()
' Match two or more occurrences of the same character.
Dim pattern As String = "(\w)\1+"
' Use case-insensitive matching.
Dim rci As New RegexCompilationInfo(pattern, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase,
"DuplicateChars", "CustomRegexes",
True, TimeSpan.FromSeconds(2))
' Define an assembly to contain the compiled regular expression.
Dim an As New AssemblyName()
an.Name = "RegexLib"
Dim rciList As RegexCompilationInfo() = New RegexCompilationInfo() { rci }
' Compile the regular expression and create the assembly.
Regex.CompileToAssembly(rciList, an)
End Sub
End Module
The regular expression pattern (\w)\1+
is defined as shown in the following table.
Pattern | Description |
---|---|
(\w) |
Match any word character and assign it to the first capturing group. |
\1+ |
Match one or more occurrences of the value of the first captured group. |
The following example uses the DuplicatedChars
regular expression to identify duplicate characters in a string array. When it calls the DuplicatedChars
constructor, it changes the time-out interval to .5 seconds.
using CustomRegexes;
using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
var rgx = new DuplicateChars(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(.5));
string[] values = { "Greeeeeat", "seed", "deed", "beam",
"loop", "Aardvark" };
// Display regex information.
Console.WriteLine("Regular Expression Pattern: {0}", rgx);
Console.WriteLine("Regex timeout value: {0} seconds\n",
rgx.MatchTimeout.TotalSeconds);
// Display matching information.
foreach (var value in values) {
Match m = rgx.Match(value);
if (m.Success)
Console.WriteLine("'{0}' found in '{1}' at positions {2}-{3}",
m.Value, value, m.Index, m.Index + m.Length - 1);
else
Console.WriteLine("No match found in '{0}'", value);
}
}
}
// The example displays the following output:
// Regular Expression Pattern: (\w)\1+
// Regex timeout value: 0.5 seconds
//
// //eeeee// found in //Greeeeeat// at positions 2-6
// //ee// found in //seed// at positions 1-2
// //ee// found in //deed// at positions 1-2
// No match found in //beam//
// //oo// found in //loop// at positions 1-2
// //Aa// found in //Aardvark// at positions 0-1
Imports CustomRegexes
Imports System.Text.RegularExpressions
Module Example
Public Sub Main()
Dim rgx As New DuplicateChars(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(.5))
Dim values() As String = { "Greeeeeat", "seed", "deed", "beam",
"loop", "Aardvark" }
' Display regex information.
Console.WriteLine("Regular Expression Pattern: {0}", rgx)
Console.WriteLine("Regex timeout value: {0} seconds",
rgx.MatchTimeout.TotalSeconds)
Console.WriteLine()
' Display matching information.
For Each value In values
Dim m As Match = rgx.Match(value)
If m.Success Then
Console.WriteLine("'{0}' found in '{1}' at positions {2}-{3}",
m.Value, value, m.Index, m.Index + m.Length - 1)
Else
Console.WriteLine("No match found in '{0}'", value)
End If
Next
End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
' Regular Expression Pattern: (\w)\1+
' Regex timeout value: 0.5 seconds
'
' 'eeeee' found in 'Greeeeeat' at positions 2-6
' 'ee' found in 'seed' at positions 1-2
' 'ee' found in 'deed' at positions 1-2
' No match found in 'beam'
' 'oo' found in 'loop' at positions 1-2
' 'Aa' found in 'Aardvark' at positions 0-1
Remarks
The MatchTimeout property defines the default time-out interval for the compiled regular expression. This value represents the approximate amount of time that a compiled regular expression will execute a single matching operation before the operation times out and the regular expression engine throws a RegexMatchTimeoutException exception during its next timing check.
Important
We recommend that you always set a default time-out value for a compiled regular expression. Consumers of your regular expression library can override that time-out value by passing a TimeSpan value that represents the new time-out interval to the compiled regular expression's class constructor.
You can assign a default time-out value to a RegexCompilationInfo object in any of the following ways:
By calling the AppDomain.SetData method and providing the string representation of a TimeSpan value for the "REGEX_DEFAULT_MATCH_TIMEOUT" property.
By calling the RegexCompilationInfo(String, RegexOptions, String, String, Boolean, TimeSpan) constructor and providing a value for the
matchTimeout
parameter.By setting the value of this property.
To set a reasonable time-out interval, consider the following factors:
The length and complexity of the regular expression pattern. Longer and more complex regular expressions require more time than shorter and simpler ones.
The expected machine load. Processing takes more time on systems with high CPU and memory utilization.