libmagic_rs/parser/ast.rs
1// Copyright (c) 2025-2026 the libmagic-rs contributors
2// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
3
4//! Abstract Syntax Tree definitions for magic rules
5//!
6//! This module contains the core data structures that represent parsed magic rules
7//! and their components, including offset specifications, type kinds, operators, and values.
8
9use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
10use std::num::{NonZeroU32, NonZeroUsize};
11
12/// The width of the length prefix for Pascal strings.
13///
14/// Uppercase suffix letters (`/H`, `/L`) indicate big-endian byte order.
15/// Lowercase suffix letters (`/h`, `/l`) indicate little-endian byte order.
16///
17/// # Examples
18///
19/// ```
20/// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::PStringLengthWidth;
21/// let width = PStringLengthWidth::OneByte;
22/// assert_eq!(width.byte_count(), 1);
23///
24/// let width = PStringLengthWidth::TwoByteBE;
25/// assert_eq!(width.byte_count(), 2);
26///
27/// let width = PStringLengthWidth::FourByteLE;
28/// assert_eq!(width.byte_count(), 4);
29/// ```
30#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
31#[allow(clippy::enum_variant_names)]
32#[non_exhaustive]
33pub enum PStringLengthWidth {
34 /// 1-byte length prefix (default, `/B` suffix)
35 ///
36 /// # Examples
37 ///
38 /// ```
39 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::PStringLengthWidth;
40 /// let width = PStringLengthWidth::OneByte;
41 /// assert_eq!(width.byte_count(), 1);
42 /// ```
43 OneByte,
44 /// 2-byte big-endian length prefix (`/H` suffix)
45 ///
46 /// # Examples
47 ///
48 /// ```
49 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::PStringLengthWidth;
50 /// let width = PStringLengthWidth::TwoByteBE;
51 /// assert_eq!(width.byte_count(), 2);
52 /// ```
53 TwoByteBE,
54 /// 2-byte little-endian length prefix (`/h` suffix)
55 ///
56 /// # Examples
57 ///
58 /// ```
59 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::PStringLengthWidth;
60 /// let width = PStringLengthWidth::TwoByteLE;
61 /// assert_eq!(width.byte_count(), 2);
62 /// ```
63 TwoByteLE,
64 /// 4-byte big-endian length prefix (`/L` suffix)
65 ///
66 /// # Examples
67 ///
68 /// ```
69 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::PStringLengthWidth;
70 /// let width = PStringLengthWidth::FourByteBE;
71 /// assert_eq!(width.byte_count(), 4);
72 /// ```
73 FourByteBE,
74 /// 4-byte little-endian length prefix (`/l` suffix)
75 ///
76 /// # Examples
77 ///
78 /// ```
79 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::PStringLengthWidth;
80 /// let width = PStringLengthWidth::FourByteLE;
81 /// assert_eq!(width.byte_count(), 4);
82 /// ```
83 FourByteLE,
84}
85
86impl PStringLengthWidth {
87 /// Returns the number of bytes used for the length prefix.
88 #[must_use]
89 pub fn byte_count(&self) -> usize {
90 match self {
91 Self::OneByte => 1,
92 Self::TwoByteBE | Self::TwoByteLE => 2,
93 Self::FourByteBE | Self::FourByteLE => 4,
94 }
95 }
96}
97
98/// Arithmetic operation applied to the value read at an indirect offset's
99/// `base_offset` before the result is used as the final file offset.
100///
101/// magic(5) supports `+`, `-`, `*`, `/`, `%`, `&`, `|`, and `^` between the
102/// pointer-type specifier and the operand inside the parentheses. Addition
103/// and subtraction collapse to [`IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add`] with a signed
104/// `adjustment` (so `(N.X-1)` is `Add(-1)` rather than a separate `Sub`
105/// variant); the remaining operators each have a dedicated variant.
106///
107/// The default is [`IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add`]; an indirect offset with no
108/// arithmetic — just `(base.type)` — is encoded as `Add` with `adjustment:
109/// 0`, preserving backwards compatibility.
110///
111/// # Examples
112///
113/// ```
114/// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::IndirectAdjustmentOp;
115///
116/// assert_eq!(IndirectAdjustmentOp::default(), IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add);
117/// ```
118#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, Serialize, Deserialize, Default)]
119#[non_exhaustive]
120pub enum IndirectAdjustmentOp {
121 /// Addition (also covers subtraction via negative `adjustment`).
122 ///
123 /// # Examples
124 ///
125 /// ```
126 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::IndirectAdjustmentOp;
127 /// assert_eq!(IndirectAdjustmentOp::default(), IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add);
128 /// ```
129 #[default]
130 Add,
131 /// Multiplication: `pointer_value * adjustment`.
132 ///
133 /// # Examples
134 ///
135 /// ```
136 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::IndirectAdjustmentOp;
137 /// let op = IndirectAdjustmentOp::Mul;
138 /// assert_eq!(op, IndirectAdjustmentOp::Mul);
139 /// ```
140 Mul,
141 /// Truncating integer division: `pointer_value / adjustment`. Division
142 /// by zero is rejected by the evaluator with an error.
143 ///
144 /// # Examples
145 ///
146 /// ```
147 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::IndirectAdjustmentOp;
148 /// let op = IndirectAdjustmentOp::Div;
149 /// assert_eq!(op, IndirectAdjustmentOp::Div);
150 /// ```
151 Div,
152 /// Remainder: `pointer_value % adjustment`. Modulo by zero is rejected
153 /// by the evaluator with an error.
154 ///
155 /// # Examples
156 ///
157 /// ```
158 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::IndirectAdjustmentOp;
159 /// let op = IndirectAdjustmentOp::Mod;
160 /// assert_eq!(op, IndirectAdjustmentOp::Mod);
161 /// ```
162 Mod,
163 /// Bitwise AND: `pointer_value & adjustment`.
164 ///
165 /// # Examples
166 ///
167 /// ```
168 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::IndirectAdjustmentOp;
169 /// let op = IndirectAdjustmentOp::And;
170 /// assert_eq!(op, IndirectAdjustmentOp::And);
171 /// ```
172 And,
173 /// Bitwise OR: `pointer_value | adjustment`.
174 ///
175 /// # Examples
176 ///
177 /// ```
178 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::IndirectAdjustmentOp;
179 /// let op = IndirectAdjustmentOp::Or;
180 /// assert_eq!(op, IndirectAdjustmentOp::Or);
181 /// ```
182 Or,
183 /// Bitwise XOR: `pointer_value ^ adjustment`.
184 ///
185 /// # Examples
186 ///
187 /// ```
188 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::IndirectAdjustmentOp;
189 /// let op = IndirectAdjustmentOp::Xor;
190 /// assert_eq!(op, IndirectAdjustmentOp::Xor);
191 /// ```
192 Xor,
193}
194
195/// Offset specification for locating data in files
196#[derive(Debug, Clone, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
197#[non_exhaustive]
198pub enum OffsetSpec {
199 /// Absolute offset from file start (or from file end if negative)
200 ///
201 /// Positive values are offsets from the start of the file.
202 /// Negative values are offsets from the end of the file (same as `FromEnd`).
203 ///
204 /// # Examples
205 ///
206 /// ```
207 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::OffsetSpec;
208 ///
209 /// let offset = OffsetSpec::Absolute(0x10); // Read at byte 16 from start
210 /// let from_end = OffsetSpec::Absolute(-4); // 4 bytes before end of file
211 /// ```
212 Absolute(i64),
213
214 /// Indirect offset through pointer dereferencing
215 ///
216 /// Reads a pointer value at `base_offset`, interprets it according to `pointer_type`
217 /// and `endian`, then combines `adjustment` with the pointer value using
218 /// `adjustment_op` to get the final offset. The default `adjustment_op`
219 /// is [`IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add`], so `(base.type)` and
220 /// `(base.type+N)` / `(base.type-N)` use addition (subtraction is
221 /// encoded as `Add` with a negative `adjustment`). magic(5) also
222 /// supports multiplicative and bitwise forms inside the parens, e.g.
223 /// `(0x200.s*2)` ([`IndirectAdjustmentOp::Mul`]).
224 ///
225 /// # Examples
226 ///
227 /// ```
228 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{OffsetSpec, TypeKind, Endianness, IndirectAdjustmentOp};
229 ///
230 /// let indirect = OffsetSpec::Indirect {
231 /// base_offset: 0x20,
232 /// base_relative: false,
233 /// pointer_type: TypeKind::Long { endian: Endianness::Little, signed: false },
234 /// adjustment: 4,
235 /// adjustment_op: IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add,
236 /// result_relative: false,
237 /// endian: Endianness::Little,
238 /// };
239 /// ```
240 Indirect {
241 /// Base offset to read pointer from. When `base_relative` is
242 /// `true`, this value is added to the current anchor (last-match
243 /// position) rather than being treated as an absolute file
244 /// position.
245 base_offset: i64,
246 /// If `true`, `base_offset` is relative to the current anchor
247 /// (i.e., `(&N.X)` syntax in magic files). Defaults to `false`
248 /// for backwards compatibility with existing AST snapshots; the
249 /// serde `default` attribute lets older serialized AST round-trip.
250 #[serde(default)]
251 base_relative: bool,
252 /// Type of pointer value
253 pointer_type: TypeKind,
254 /// Operand combined with the pointer value via `adjustment_op`.
255 ///
256 /// For `IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add`, the operand is signed (negative
257 /// values encode subtraction). For multiplicative and bitwise ops
258 /// the operand is interpreted as `i64` but typically magic files
259 /// supply non-negative literals.
260 adjustment: i64,
261 /// Arithmetic operation applied to the pointer value with
262 /// `adjustment` as the operand. Defaults to
263 /// [`IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add`] for legacy AST consumers via
264 /// serde's `default` attribute.
265 #[serde(default)]
266 adjustment_op: IndirectAdjustmentOp,
267 /// If `true`, the resolved offset is added to the current anchor
268 /// instead of being treated as an absolute file position. This
269 /// corresponds to magic-file `&(...)` syntax wrapping an indirect
270 /// spec, e.g., `&(0x10.l)`.
271 #[serde(default)]
272 result_relative: bool,
273 /// Endianness for pointer reading
274 endian: Endianness,
275 },
276
277 /// Relative offset from previous match position
278 ///
279 /// # Examples
280 ///
281 /// ```
282 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::OffsetSpec;
283 ///
284 /// let relative = OffsetSpec::Relative(8); // 8 bytes after previous match
285 /// ```
286 Relative(i64),
287
288 /// Offset from end of file (negative values move towards start)
289 ///
290 /// # Examples
291 ///
292 /// ```
293 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::OffsetSpec;
294 ///
295 /// let from_end = OffsetSpec::FromEnd(-16); // 16 bytes before end of file
296 /// ```
297 FromEnd(i64),
298}
299
300/// Control-flow directive carried by [`TypeKind::Meta`].
301///
302/// These are not value-reading types -- they correspond to magic(5)
303/// control-flow keywords (`default`, `clear`, `name`, `use`, `indirect`,
304/// `offset`) that modify how a rule set is traversed rather than reading
305/// bytes from the buffer. All six variants are fully evaluated by the
306/// engine: `default`/`clear` manage per-level sibling-matched state;
307/// `name`/`use` implement subroutine dispatch; `indirect` re-applies the
308/// root rule database at a resolved offset; and `offset` emits the
309/// current file position as `Value::Uint` for printf-style formatting.
310#[derive(Debug, Clone, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
311#[non_exhaustive]
312pub enum MetaType {
313 /// `default` directive: fires when no sibling at the same indentation
314 /// level has matched at the current offset. See magic(5) for the
315 /// "default" type semantics.
316 ///
317 /// # Examples
318 ///
319 /// ```
320 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::MetaType;
321 /// let meta = MetaType::Default;
322 /// assert_eq!(meta, MetaType::Default);
323 /// ```
324 Default,
325 /// `clear` directive: resets the sibling-matched flag so a later
326 /// `default` sibling can fire even if an earlier sibling matched.
327 /// See magic(5) for the "clear" type semantics.
328 ///
329 /// # Examples
330 ///
331 /// ```
332 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::MetaType;
333 /// let meta = MetaType::Clear;
334 /// assert_eq!(meta, MetaType::Clear);
335 /// ```
336 Clear,
337 /// `name <identifier>` directive: declares a named subroutine that
338 /// can be invoked later via [`MetaType::Use`]. See magic(5) for the
339 /// "name" type semantics.
340 ///
341 /// # Examples
342 ///
343 /// ```
344 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::MetaType;
345 /// let meta = MetaType::Name("part2".to_string());
346 /// assert_eq!(meta, MetaType::Name("part2".to_string()));
347 /// ```
348 Name(String),
349 /// `use <identifier>` directive: invokes a named subroutine
350 /// previously declared via [`MetaType::Name`]. See magic(5) for the
351 /// "use" type semantics.
352 ///
353 /// # Examples
354 ///
355 /// ```
356 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::MetaType;
357 /// let meta = MetaType::Use("part2".to_string());
358 /// assert_eq!(meta, MetaType::Use("part2".to_string()));
359 /// ```
360 Use(String),
361 /// `indirect` directive: re-applies the entire magic database at the
362 /// resolved offset. See magic(5) for the "indirect" type semantics.
363 ///
364 /// # Examples
365 ///
366 /// ```
367 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::MetaType;
368 /// let meta = MetaType::Indirect;
369 /// assert_eq!(meta, MetaType::Indirect);
370 /// ```
371 Indirect,
372 /// `offset` type keyword: reports the current file offset rather than
373 /// reading a typed value from the buffer. See magic(5) for the
374 /// "offset" type semantics.
375 ///
376 /// Evaluation: the engine resolves the rule's offset specification
377 /// to an absolute position and emits a `RuleMatch` whose `value` is
378 /// `Value::Uint(position)`. Message templates can reference that
379 /// value through printf-style format specifiers (e.g. `%lld`),
380 /// which are substituted by
381 /// [`crate::output::format::format_magic_message`] at description-
382 /// assembly time. The only supported operator is `x` (`AnyValue`);
383 /// any other operator is `debug!`-logged and skipped.
384 ///
385 /// # Examples
386 ///
387 /// ```
388 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::MetaType;
389 /// let meta = MetaType::Offset;
390 /// assert_eq!(meta, MetaType::Offset);
391 /// ```
392 Offset,
393}
394
395/// Data type specifications for interpreting bytes
396#[derive(Debug, Clone, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
397#[non_exhaustive]
398pub enum TypeKind {
399 /// Single byte
400 ///
401 /// # Examples
402 ///
403 /// ```
404 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::TypeKind;
405 ///
406 /// let byte = TypeKind::Byte { signed: true };
407 /// assert_eq!(byte, TypeKind::Byte { signed: true });
408 /// ```
409 Byte {
410 /// Whether value is signed
411 signed: bool,
412 },
413 /// 16-bit integer
414 ///
415 /// # Examples
416 ///
417 /// ```
418 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, Endianness};
419 ///
420 /// let short = TypeKind::Short { endian: Endianness::Little, signed: true };
421 /// assert_eq!(short, TypeKind::Short { endian: Endianness::Little, signed: true });
422 /// ```
423 Short {
424 /// Byte order
425 endian: Endianness,
426 /// Whether value is signed
427 signed: bool,
428 },
429 /// 32-bit integer
430 ///
431 /// # Examples
432 ///
433 /// ```
434 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, Endianness};
435 ///
436 /// let long = TypeKind::Long { endian: Endianness::Big, signed: false };
437 /// assert_eq!(long, TypeKind::Long { endian: Endianness::Big, signed: false });
438 /// ```
439 Long {
440 /// Byte order
441 endian: Endianness,
442 /// Whether value is signed
443 signed: bool,
444 },
445 /// 64-bit integer
446 ///
447 /// # Examples
448 ///
449 /// ```
450 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, Endianness};
451 ///
452 /// let quad = TypeKind::Quad { endian: Endianness::Big, signed: true };
453 /// assert_eq!(quad, TypeKind::Quad { endian: Endianness::Big, signed: true });
454 /// ```
455 Quad {
456 /// Byte order
457 endian: Endianness,
458 /// Whether value is signed
459 signed: bool,
460 },
461 /// 32-bit IEEE 754 floating-point
462 ///
463 /// # Examples
464 ///
465 /// ```
466 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, Endianness};
467 ///
468 /// let float = TypeKind::Float { endian: Endianness::Big };
469 /// assert_eq!(float, TypeKind::Float { endian: Endianness::Big });
470 /// ```
471 Float {
472 /// Byte order
473 endian: Endianness,
474 },
475 /// 64-bit IEEE 754 double-precision floating-point
476 ///
477 /// # Examples
478 ///
479 /// ```
480 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, Endianness};
481 ///
482 /// let double = TypeKind::Double { endian: Endianness::Big };
483 /// assert_eq!(double, TypeKind::Double { endian: Endianness::Big });
484 /// ```
485 Double {
486 /// Byte order
487 endian: Endianness,
488 },
489 /// 32-bit Unix timestamp (seconds since epoch)
490 ///
491 /// # Examples
492 ///
493 /// ```
494 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, Endianness};
495 ///
496 /// let date = TypeKind::Date { endian: Endianness::Big, utc: true };
497 /// assert_eq!(date, TypeKind::Date { endian: Endianness::Big, utc: true });
498 /// ```
499 Date {
500 /// Byte order
501 endian: Endianness,
502 /// true = UTC, false = local time
503 utc: bool,
504 },
505 /// 64-bit Unix timestamp (seconds since epoch)
506 ///
507 /// # Examples
508 ///
509 /// ```
510 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, Endianness};
511 ///
512 /// let qdate = TypeKind::QDate { endian: Endianness::Little, utc: false };
513 /// assert_eq!(qdate, TypeKind::QDate { endian: Endianness::Little, utc: false });
514 /// ```
515 QDate {
516 /// Byte order
517 endian: Endianness,
518 /// true = UTC, false = local time
519 utc: bool,
520 },
521 /// String data
522 ///
523 /// The `flags` field carries the modifier flags parsed from the
524 /// `/[cCwWtTbf]` suffix on a `string` rule. Default flags (all
525 /// `false`) preserve the existing byte-exact comparison path; any
526 /// non-default flag routes the rule through
527 /// `compare_string_with_flags` in `src/evaluator/types/string.rs`.
528 /// See [`StringFlags`] for per-flag semantics.
529 ///
530 /// # Examples
531 ///
532 /// ```
533 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{StringFlags, TypeKind};
534 ///
535 /// let s = TypeKind::String { max_length: None, flags: StringFlags::default() };
536 /// assert_eq!(s, TypeKind::String { max_length: None, flags: StringFlags::default() });
537 ///
538 /// let case_insensitive = TypeKind::String {
539 /// max_length: None,
540 /// flags: StringFlags::default().with_ignore_lowercase(true),
541 /// };
542 /// assert!(matches!(case_insensitive, TypeKind::String { flags, .. } if flags.ignore_lowercase));
543 /// ```
544 String {
545 /// Maximum length to read
546 max_length: Option<usize>,
547 /// Modifier flags from the `/[cCwWtTbf]` suffix
548 flags: StringFlags,
549 },
550 /// UCS-2 (16-bit Unicode) string with explicit byte order.
551 ///
552 /// Backs the magic(5) `lestring16` (little-endian) and `bestring16`
553 /// (big-endian) keywords. Each character occupies two bytes in the
554 /// file; the reader stops at a U+0000 terminator (encoded as the
555 /// 2-byte sequence `0x00 0x00`) or at the end of the buffer. The
556 /// decoded value is returned as a Rust `String` (so non-ASCII
557 /// characters are preserved when valid UCS-2).
558 ///
559 /// # Examples
560 ///
561 /// ```
562 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, Endianness};
563 ///
564 /// let le = TypeKind::String16 { endian: Endianness::Little };
565 /// assert_eq!(le, TypeKind::String16 { endian: Endianness::Little });
566 ///
567 /// let be = TypeKind::String16 { endian: Endianness::Big };
568 /// assert_eq!(be, TypeKind::String16 { endian: Endianness::Big });
569 /// ```
570 String16 {
571 /// Endianness for the 16-bit code units.
572 endian: Endianness,
573 },
574 /// Pascal string (length-prefixed, supports 1/2/4-byte prefix, with optional max length)
575 ///
576 /// Pascal strings store the length as a prefix (1, 2, or 4 bytes, with configurable endianness), followed by
577 /// that many bytes of string data. Unlike C strings, they are not null-terminated.
578 ///
579 /// # Examples
580 ///
581 /// ```
582 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{TypeKind, PStringLengthWidth};
583 ///
584 /// let pstring = TypeKind::PString { max_length: None, length_width: PStringLengthWidth::OneByte, length_includes_itself: false };
585 /// assert_eq!(pstring, TypeKind::PString { max_length: None, length_width: PStringLengthWidth::OneByte, length_includes_itself: false });
586 ///
587 /// let limited = TypeKind::PString { max_length: Some(64), length_width: PStringLengthWidth::TwoByteBE, length_includes_itself: false };
588 /// assert_eq!(limited, TypeKind::PString { max_length: Some(64), length_width: PStringLengthWidth::TwoByteBE, length_includes_itself: false });
589 ///
590 /// // /J flag: stored length includes the length field itself
591 /// let jpeg = TypeKind::PString { max_length: None, length_width: PStringLengthWidth::TwoByteBE, length_includes_itself: true };
592 /// assert_eq!(jpeg, TypeKind::PString { max_length: None, length_width: PStringLengthWidth::TwoByteBE, length_includes_itself: true });
593 /// ```
594 PString {
595 /// Maximum length to read (caps the length value)
596 max_length: Option<usize>,
597 /// Width of the length prefix
598 length_width: PStringLengthWidth,
599 /// Whether the stored length includes the length field itself (`/J` flag)
600 length_includes_itself: bool,
601 },
602 /// Regular expression matching against file contents
603 ///
604 /// Regex rules match a POSIX-extended regular expression pattern against the
605 /// file buffer. Patterns are compiled with multi-line mode always enabled
606 /// (matching libmagic's unconditional `REG_NEWLINE`), so `^` and `$` match
607 /// at line boundaries and `.` does not match `\n`. The `flags` control
608 /// case sensitivity and anchor advance semantics; the `count` field
609 /// controls the scan window (byte or line bounds). The scan window is
610 /// always capped at 8192 bytes (matching GNU `file`'s `FILE_REGEX_MAX`;
611 /// enforced in the evaluator).
612 ///
613 /// # Examples
614 ///
615 /// ```
616 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{RegexCount, RegexFlags, TypeKind};
617 /// use std::num::NonZeroU32;
618 ///
619 /// // Plain `regex` -- no flags, default 8192-byte scan window.
620 /// let plain = TypeKind::Regex {
621 /// flags: RegexFlags::default(),
622 /// count: RegexCount::Default,
623 /// };
624 ///
625 /// // `regex/1l` -- scan the first line only.
626 /// let first_line = TypeKind::Regex {
627 /// flags: RegexFlags::default(),
628 /// count: RegexCount::Lines(NonZeroU32::new(1)),
629 /// };
630 ///
631 /// // `regex/cs` -- case-insensitive, anchor advances to match-start.
632 /// let case_insensitive_start = TypeKind::Regex {
633 /// flags: RegexFlags {
634 /// case_insensitive: true,
635 /// start_offset: true,
636 /// },
637 /// count: RegexCount::Default,
638 /// };
639 /// ```
640 Regex {
641 /// Modifier flags from the `/[cs]` suffix (`/c` case-insensitive,
642 /// `/s` start-offset anchor). Line-mode is encoded by the
643 /// [`RegexCount::Lines`] variant of `count`, not a flag.
644 flags: RegexFlags,
645 /// Scan window specifier: default 8192 bytes, explicit byte
646 /// count, or explicit line count. See [`RegexCount`] for the
647 /// three cases.
648 count: RegexCount,
649 },
650 /// Multi-byte pattern search within a bounded range
651 ///
652 /// Search rules look for a literal byte pattern within `range` bytes of
653 /// the offset. Unlike [`TypeKind::String`], which only matches at the
654 /// exact offset, `search` scans forward up to `range` bytes for the
655 /// first occurrence. The range is **mandatory** per GNU `file`'s
656 /// magic(5) specification and is stored as a [`NonZeroUsize`] so a
657 /// zero-range search is unrepresentable.
658 ///
659 /// # Examples
660 ///
661 /// ```
662 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::TypeKind;
663 /// use std::num::NonZeroUsize;
664 ///
665 /// // `search/256` -- scan up to 256 bytes for the literal pattern.
666 /// let bounded = TypeKind::Search {
667 /// range: NonZeroUsize::new(256).unwrap(),
668 /// flags: libmagic_rs::parser::ast::SearchFlags::default(),
669 /// };
670 /// ```
671 Search {
672 /// Scan window width in bytes, starting at the rule's offset.
673 range: NonZeroUsize,
674 /// Modifier flags from the `/[sCcWwTtBbf]` suffix on a `search`
675 /// rule. The `/s` flag controls anchor advance (match-START vs
676 /// match-END); the eight `StringFlags`-shared letters alter how
677 /// the literal pattern is compared against the file bytes. See
678 /// [`SearchFlags`] for the per-flag semantics.
679 flags: SearchFlags,
680 },
681 /// Control-flow directive (`default`, `clear`, `name`, `use`,
682 /// `indirect`, `offset`).
683 ///
684 /// These magic(5) keywords do not read or compare bytes; they modify
685 /// how a rule set is traversed. All six variants are fully evaluated:
686 /// `default` fires as a fallback when no sibling at the same level
687 /// has matched; `clear` resets that flag; `name`/`use` support
688 /// subroutine definition and invocation; `indirect` re-enters the
689 /// rule set at a resolved offset; `offset` emits the resolved file
690 /// position as `Value::Uint` for printf-style message substitution.
691 /// See [`MetaType`] for the individual variants.
692 ///
693 /// # Examples
694 ///
695 /// ```
696 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{MetaType, TypeKind};
697 /// let default_rule = TypeKind::Meta(MetaType::Default);
698 /// assert_eq!(default_rule, TypeKind::Meta(MetaType::Default));
699 /// ```
700 Meta(MetaType),
701}
702
703/// Regex modifier flags parsed from the `/[cs]` suffix on a `regex` rule.
704///
705/// The `/l` "line-based window" modifier is **not** represented here; it
706/// lives on [`RegexCount::Lines`] so that the type-level encoding makes
707/// "line count" and "byte count" mutually exclusive. An earlier design
708/// used two separate fields (`line_based: bool` + `count: Option<u32>`)
709/// which admitted the cross-field state `line_based: true, count: None`;
710/// under the current encoding that case is expressed explicitly as
711/// [`RegexCount::Lines(None)`](RegexCount::Lines) -- the `regex/l`
712/// shorthand -- and is behaviorally equivalent to [`RegexCount::Default`]
713/// (both walk the full 8192-byte capped window).
714///
715/// All flags default to `false` via [`RegexFlags::default`], equivalent
716/// to a plain `regex` with no `/c` or `/s` suffix.
717///
718/// # Examples
719///
720/// ```
721/// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::RegexFlags;
722///
723/// let plain = RegexFlags::default();
724/// assert!(!plain.case_insensitive);
725/// assert!(!plain.start_offset);
726///
727/// let case_and_start = RegexFlags::default()
728/// .with_case_insensitive(true)
729/// .with_start_offset(true);
730/// assert!(case_and_start.case_insensitive);
731/// assert!(case_and_start.start_offset);
732/// ```
733#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, Default, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
734pub struct RegexFlags {
735 /// `/c` -- case-insensitive matching. When `true`, ASCII letter
736 /// casing is ignored during pattern matching.
737 pub case_insensitive: bool,
738 /// `/s` -- advance the GNU `file` previous-match anchor to the start
739 /// of the matched region instead of its end. Matches libmagic's
740 /// `REGEX_OFFSET_START` flag, which zeros the length contribution in
741 /// `moffset()` for `FILE_REGEX`. Useful for chaining child rules that
742 /// need to re-match from the position where the parent regex began.
743 pub start_offset: bool,
744}
745
746impl RegexFlags {
747 /// Builder-style setter for [`RegexFlags::case_insensitive`] (`/c`).
748 ///
749 /// Chain after [`RegexFlags::default()`] to construct `RegexFlags`
750 /// values without exhaustive struct literals. If a new flag is
751 /// added to `RegexFlags` in the future, callers using the builder
752 /// form keep compiling; callers using struct literals would need
753 /// an update.
754 #[must_use]
755 pub const fn with_case_insensitive(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
756 self.case_insensitive = value;
757 self
758 }
759
760 /// Builder-style setter for [`RegexFlags::start_offset`] (`/s`).
761 ///
762 /// Chain after [`RegexFlags::default()`] to construct `RegexFlags`
763 /// values without exhaustive struct literals.
764 #[must_use]
765 pub const fn with_start_offset(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
766 self.start_offset = value;
767 self
768 }
769}
770
771/// String modifier flags parsed from the `/[cCwWtTbf]` suffix on a `string`
772/// rule.
773///
774/// Mirrors libmagic's `STRING_*` flag bits from `src/file.h`. Each flag
775/// alters how `compare_string_with_flags` walks the pattern and buffer in
776/// parallel. The default (all `false`) preserves byte-exact comparison.
777///
778/// **`/c` vs `/C` are asymmetric**: the pattern character controls
779/// direction. With `/c`, only lowercase pattern chars trigger case-folding
780/// (the file byte is `tolower`'d). With `/C`, only uppercase pattern chars
781/// trigger folding (the file byte is `toupper`'d). Mixed-case patterns
782/// behave intuitively: `/c FoO` matches `FoO`, `Foo`, `FOO` but not
783/// `fOO` (the uppercase `F` is literal). See GOTCHAS S6.5 for the
784/// rationale and `src/softmagic.c` for the canonical libmagic contract.
785///
786/// **`/B` is NOT a string flag** -- it is the `pstring` 1-byte length-width
787/// letter (`PSTRING_1_BE`). `string/B` is rejected at parse time. See
788/// GOTCHAS S6.6.
789///
790/// # Examples
791///
792/// ```
793/// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::StringFlags;
794///
795/// let plain = StringFlags::default();
796/// assert!(!plain.ignore_lowercase);
797///
798/// let case_insensitive = StringFlags::default().with_ignore_lowercase(true);
799/// assert!(case_insensitive.ignore_lowercase);
800///
801/// let compound = StringFlags::default()
802/// .with_ignore_lowercase(true)
803/// .with_compact_optional_whitespace(true);
804/// assert!(compound.ignore_lowercase);
805/// assert!(compound.compact_optional_whitespace);
806/// ```
807#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, Default, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
808// libmagic's contract is naturally a bitfield: each flag is a distinct
809// magic(5) letter (/c, /C, /w, /W, /t, /T, /b, /f) with its own STRING_*
810// constant in libmagic src/file.h. Flags compose freely (string/cw is
811// /c plus /w; string/wcCtTbf sets all eight). Folding pairs into enums
812// is possible (whitespace: none|optional|required; case: none|lower|upper)
813// but would obscure the libmagic mapping and produce verbose match arms
814// in every consumer. The bool-per-flag layout mirrors `RegexFlags` and
815// the libmagic source -- the clippy lint is overruled by the design.
816#[allow(clippy::struct_excessive_bools)]
817pub struct StringFlags {
818 /// `/W` -- `STRING_COMPACT_WHITESPACE`. Pattern whitespace requires at
819 /// least one whitespace byte in the file, then any further whitespace
820 /// in the file is consumed greedily.
821 pub compact_whitespace: bool,
822 /// `/w` -- `STRING_COMPACT_OPTIONAL_WHITESPACE`. Pattern whitespace
823 /// matches zero or more whitespace bytes in the file.
824 pub compact_optional_whitespace: bool,
825 /// `/c` -- `STRING_IGNORE_LOWERCASE`. When the pattern char is
826 /// lowercase, the file byte is `to_ascii_lowercase`'d before
827 /// comparison. Uppercase pattern chars are compared literally.
828 pub ignore_lowercase: bool,
829 /// `/C` -- `STRING_IGNORE_UPPERCASE`. When the pattern char is
830 /// uppercase, the file byte is `to_ascii_uppercase`'d before
831 /// comparison. Lowercase pattern chars are compared literally.
832 pub ignore_uppercase: bool,
833 /// `/t` -- `STRING_TEXTTEST`. Hint that this rule applies to text
834 /// files. Captured for MIME-output integration; does not currently
835 /// alter comparison.
836 pub text_test: bool,
837 /// `/T` -- `STRING_TRIM`. Trim leading and trailing ASCII whitespace
838 /// from the pattern before comparison. The trim is applied at
839 /// evaluation time (in `read_pattern_match`) so the AST keeps the
840 /// original pattern bytes; the comparison function receives the
841 /// trimmed slice.
842 pub trim: bool,
843 /// `/b` -- `STRING_BINTEST`. Hint that this rule applies to binary
844 /// files. Captured for MIME-output integration; does not currently
845 /// alter comparison.
846 pub bin_test: bool,
847 /// `/f` -- `STRING_FULL_WORD`. Post-match check that the byte after
848 /// the matched region is either end-of-buffer or a non-word
849 /// character (ASCII alphanumeric or `_`).
850 pub full_word: bool,
851}
852
853impl StringFlags {
854 /// Returns `true` when every flag is `false` (the byte-exact fast
855 /// path). The evaluator dispatcher uses this to skip the
856 /// parallel-walk comparison when no flags are set.
857 #[must_use]
858 pub const fn is_empty(self) -> bool {
859 !self.compact_whitespace
860 && !self.compact_optional_whitespace
861 && !self.ignore_lowercase
862 && !self.ignore_uppercase
863 && !self.text_test
864 && !self.trim
865 && !self.bin_test
866 && !self.full_word
867 }
868
869 /// Builder-style setter for `compact_whitespace` (`/W`).
870 #[must_use]
871 pub const fn with_compact_whitespace(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
872 self.compact_whitespace = value;
873 self
874 }
875
876 /// Builder-style setter for `compact_optional_whitespace` (`/w`).
877 #[must_use]
878 pub const fn with_compact_optional_whitespace(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
879 self.compact_optional_whitespace = value;
880 self
881 }
882
883 /// Builder-style setter for `ignore_lowercase` (`/c`).
884 #[must_use]
885 pub const fn with_ignore_lowercase(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
886 self.ignore_lowercase = value;
887 self
888 }
889
890 /// Builder-style setter for `ignore_uppercase` (`/C`).
891 #[must_use]
892 pub const fn with_ignore_uppercase(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
893 self.ignore_uppercase = value;
894 self
895 }
896
897 /// Builder-style setter for `text_test` (`/t`).
898 #[must_use]
899 pub const fn with_text_test(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
900 self.text_test = value;
901 self
902 }
903
904 /// Builder-style setter for `trim` (`/T`).
905 #[must_use]
906 pub const fn with_trim(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
907 self.trim = value;
908 self
909 }
910
911 /// Builder-style setter for `bin_test` (`/b`).
912 #[must_use]
913 pub const fn with_bin_test(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
914 self.bin_test = value;
915 self
916 }
917
918 /// Builder-style setter for `full_word` (`/f`).
919 #[must_use]
920 pub const fn with_full_word(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
921 self.full_word = value;
922 self
923 }
924}
925
926/// Search modifier flags parsed from the `/[sCcWwTtBbf]` suffix on a
927/// `search` rule.
928///
929/// Mirrors [`StringFlags`] for the eight `STRING_*` letters that alter
930/// the literal-pattern comparison (`/c`, `/C`, `/w`, `/W`, `/t`, `/T`,
931/// `/b`, `/f`), plus a search-only `start_anchor` field for `/s` which
932/// shifts the GNU `file` previous-match anchor to the START of the
933/// matched region. The default (all `false`) preserves byte-exact
934/// comparison and match-END anchor advance.
935///
936/// `SearchFlags` is structurally parallel to `StringFlags`: when one
937/// struct grows a field, the other gains the same field in lockstep
938/// so that [`SearchFlags::to_string_flags`] can keep handing off to
939/// `compare_string_with_flags` without a generic refactor. The
940/// search-only `start_anchor` field has no analog in `string` rules.
941///
942/// **`/c` vs `/C` are asymmetric** in the same way as [`StringFlags`]:
943/// the pattern character controls fold direction. See [`StringFlags`]
944/// and GOTCHAS S6.5 for the rationale.
945///
946/// # Examples
947///
948/// ```
949/// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::SearchFlags;
950///
951/// let plain = SearchFlags::default();
952/// assert!(!plain.start_anchor);
953/// assert!(plain.is_empty());
954/// assert!(!plain.needs_byte_compare());
955///
956/// let start = SearchFlags::default().with_start_anchor(true);
957/// assert!(start.start_anchor);
958/// assert!(!start.is_empty());
959/// // /s is anchor-only -- does not force the byte-compare slow path.
960/// assert!(!start.needs_byte_compare());
961///
962/// let case = SearchFlags::default().with_ignore_lowercase(true);
963/// assert!(case.needs_byte_compare());
964/// ```
965#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, Default, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
966// libmagic's contract is naturally a bitfield: each flag is a distinct
967// magic(5) letter with its own STRING_*/SEARCH_* constant in libmagic
968// src/file.h. Flags compose freely (search/cs is /c plus /s; search/sWcT
969// sets four). Folding pairs into enums is possible but would obscure
970// the libmagic mapping and produce verbose match arms in every consumer.
971// The bool-per-flag layout mirrors `StringFlags` and `RegexFlags` and the
972// libmagic source -- the clippy lint is overruled by the design.
973#[allow(clippy::struct_excessive_bools)]
974pub struct SearchFlags {
975 /// `/W` -- `STRING_COMPACT_WHITESPACE`. Pattern whitespace requires at
976 /// least one whitespace byte in the file, then any further whitespace
977 /// in the file is consumed greedily.
978 pub compact_whitespace: bool,
979 /// `/w` -- `STRING_COMPACT_OPTIONAL_WHITESPACE`. Pattern whitespace
980 /// matches zero or more whitespace bytes in the file.
981 pub compact_optional_whitespace: bool,
982 /// `/c` -- `STRING_IGNORE_LOWERCASE`. When the pattern char is
983 /// lowercase, the file byte is `to_ascii_lowercase`'d before
984 /// comparison. Uppercase pattern chars are compared literally.
985 pub ignore_lowercase: bool,
986 /// `/C` -- `STRING_IGNORE_UPPERCASE`. When the pattern char is
987 /// uppercase, the file byte is `to_ascii_uppercase`'d before
988 /// comparison. Lowercase pattern chars are compared literally.
989 pub ignore_uppercase: bool,
990 /// `/t` -- `STRING_TEXTTEST`. Hint that this rule applies to text
991 /// files. Captured for MIME-output integration; does not currently
992 /// alter comparison.
993 pub text_test: bool,
994 /// `/T` -- `STRING_TRIM`. Trim leading and trailing ASCII whitespace
995 /// from the pattern before comparison.
996 pub trim: bool,
997 /// `/b` -- `STRING_BINTEST`. Hint that this rule applies to binary
998 /// files. Captured for MIME-output integration; does not currently
999 /// alter comparison.
1000 pub bin_test: bool,
1001 /// `/f` -- `STRING_FULL_WORD`. Post-match check that the byte after
1002 /// the matched region is either end-of-buffer or a non-word
1003 /// character (ASCII alphanumeric or `_`).
1004 pub full_word: bool,
1005 /// `/s` -- magic(5) "search-start" flag. When `true`, the GNU `file`
1006 /// previous-match anchor advance lands on the match-START index
1007 /// rather than match-END (the default). Mirrors libmagic's
1008 /// `FILE_SEARCH` anchor handling in `src/softmagic.c::moffset`. The
1009 /// dispatch happens in
1010 /// `src/evaluator/types/search.rs::search_bytes_consumed`.
1011 pub start_anchor: bool,
1012}
1013
1014impl SearchFlags {
1015 /// Returns `true` when every flag is `false` (default-constructed).
1016 #[must_use]
1017 pub const fn is_empty(self) -> bool {
1018 !self.compact_whitespace
1019 && !self.compact_optional_whitespace
1020 && !self.ignore_lowercase
1021 && !self.ignore_uppercase
1022 && !self.text_test
1023 && !self.trim
1024 && !self.bin_test
1025 && !self.full_word
1026 && !self.start_anchor
1027 }
1028
1029 /// Returns `true` when any flag alters the literal-pattern
1030 /// comparison, forcing the byte-walk slow path through
1031 /// `compare_string_with_flags`. The anchor-only / metadata-only
1032 /// flags (`/s`, `/t`, `/b`) do **not** trigger byte-compare;
1033 /// they preserve the `memchr::memmem::find` fast path.
1034 #[must_use]
1035 pub const fn needs_byte_compare(self) -> bool {
1036 self.compact_whitespace
1037 || self.compact_optional_whitespace
1038 || self.ignore_lowercase
1039 || self.ignore_uppercase
1040 || self.trim
1041 || self.full_word
1042 }
1043
1044 /// Project the eight shared flag fields onto a [`StringFlags`] for
1045 /// handoff to `compare_string_with_flags`. The search-only
1046 /// `start_anchor` field is dropped (it is anchor-advance policy,
1047 /// not comparison policy).
1048 ///
1049 /// # Examples
1050 ///
1051 /// ```
1052 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::SearchFlags;
1053 ///
1054 /// let sf = SearchFlags::default()
1055 /// .with_ignore_lowercase(true)
1056 /// .with_trim(true)
1057 /// .with_start_anchor(true);
1058 /// let projected = sf.to_string_flags();
1059 /// assert!(projected.ignore_lowercase);
1060 /// assert!(projected.trim);
1061 /// // /s has no analog in StringFlags.
1062 /// ```
1063 #[must_use]
1064 pub const fn to_string_flags(self) -> StringFlags {
1065 StringFlags {
1066 compact_whitespace: self.compact_whitespace,
1067 compact_optional_whitespace: self.compact_optional_whitespace,
1068 ignore_lowercase: self.ignore_lowercase,
1069 ignore_uppercase: self.ignore_uppercase,
1070 text_test: self.text_test,
1071 trim: self.trim,
1072 bin_test: self.bin_test,
1073 full_word: self.full_word,
1074 }
1075 }
1076
1077 /// Builder-style setter for `compact_whitespace` (`/W`).
1078 #[must_use]
1079 pub const fn with_compact_whitespace(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1080 self.compact_whitespace = value;
1081 self
1082 }
1083
1084 /// Builder-style setter for `compact_optional_whitespace` (`/w`).
1085 #[must_use]
1086 pub const fn with_compact_optional_whitespace(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1087 self.compact_optional_whitespace = value;
1088 self
1089 }
1090
1091 /// Builder-style setter for `ignore_lowercase` (`/c`).
1092 #[must_use]
1093 pub const fn with_ignore_lowercase(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1094 self.ignore_lowercase = value;
1095 self
1096 }
1097
1098 /// Builder-style setter for `ignore_uppercase` (`/C`).
1099 #[must_use]
1100 pub const fn with_ignore_uppercase(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1101 self.ignore_uppercase = value;
1102 self
1103 }
1104
1105 /// Builder-style setter for `text_test` (`/t`).
1106 #[must_use]
1107 pub const fn with_text_test(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1108 self.text_test = value;
1109 self
1110 }
1111
1112 /// Builder-style setter for `trim` (`/T`).
1113 #[must_use]
1114 pub const fn with_trim(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1115 self.trim = value;
1116 self
1117 }
1118
1119 /// Builder-style setter for `bin_test` (`/b`).
1120 #[must_use]
1121 pub const fn with_bin_test(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1122 self.bin_test = value;
1123 self
1124 }
1125
1126 /// Builder-style setter for `full_word` (`/f`).
1127 #[must_use]
1128 pub const fn with_full_word(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1129 self.full_word = value;
1130 self
1131 }
1132
1133 /// Builder-style setter for `start_anchor` (`/s`).
1134 #[must_use]
1135 pub const fn with_start_anchor(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
1136 self.start_anchor = value;
1137 self
1138 }
1139}
1140
1141/// Scan window specifier for a [`TypeKind::Regex`] rule.
1142///
1143/// Encodes the three mutually-exclusive scan modes in a single enum so
1144/// that the "byte count" and "line count" cases cannot be confused. The
1145/// `regex/l` shorthand (line mode with no explicit count) is represented
1146/// explicitly as [`RegexCount::Lines(None)`](RegexCount::Lines), which
1147/// is behaviorally equivalent to [`RegexCount::Default`] -- both walk
1148/// the full 8192-byte capped window -- but preserves the magic-file
1149/// surface syntax of the original rule. The 8192-byte hard cap
1150/// (matching GNU `file`'s `FILE_REGEX_MAX`) is applied by the evaluator
1151/// on every variant.
1152///
1153/// # Examples
1154///
1155/// ```
1156/// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::RegexCount;
1157/// use std::num::NonZeroU32;
1158///
1159/// // Plain `regex` (no suffix): default 8192-byte window.
1160/// assert_eq!(RegexCount::default(), RegexCount::Default);
1161///
1162/// // `regex/100`: scan at most 100 bytes.
1163/// let hundred_bytes = RegexCount::Bytes(NonZeroU32::new(100).unwrap());
1164///
1165/// // `regex/1l`: scan the first line.
1166/// let one_line = RegexCount::Lines(NonZeroU32::new(1));
1167///
1168/// // `regex/l`: line-mode with no explicit count (walks terminators
1169/// // to the end of the 8192-byte capped window).
1170/// let unbounded_lines = RegexCount::Lines(None);
1171/// ```
1172#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, Default, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
1173pub enum RegexCount {
1174 /// No scan bound (plain `regex` with no suffix). Scans the default
1175 /// 8192-byte window from the rule's offset.
1176 #[default]
1177 Default,
1178 /// Byte-bounded scan (`regex/N` with no `/l` flag). The window is
1179 /// `min(n, 8192, remaining_buffer)` bytes long. `NonZeroU32` makes
1180 /// a zero-byte scan unrepresentable.
1181 Bytes(NonZeroU32),
1182 /// Line-bounded scan (`regex/Nl` or `regex/l`). The window walks
1183 /// LF / CRLF / bare CR line terminators from the offset. With
1184 /// `Some(n)`, the walk stops after the Nth terminator (inclusive).
1185 /// With `None` (the `regex/l` shorthand), the walk continues to
1186 /// the end of the 8192-byte capped window. Either way the
1187 /// effective byte window is capped at 8192.
1188 Lines(Option<NonZeroU32>),
1189}
1190
1191impl TypeKind {
1192 /// Returns the bit width of integer types, or `None` for non-integer types (e.g., String).
1193 ///
1194 /// # Examples
1195 ///
1196 /// ```
1197 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{Endianness, StringFlags, TypeKind};
1198 ///
1199 /// assert_eq!(TypeKind::Byte { signed: false }.bit_width(), Some(8));
1200 /// assert_eq!(TypeKind::Short { endian: Endianness::Native, signed: true }.bit_width(), Some(16));
1201 /// assert_eq!(TypeKind::Long { endian: Endianness::Native, signed: true }.bit_width(), Some(32));
1202 /// assert_eq!(TypeKind::Quad { endian: Endianness::Native, signed: true }.bit_width(), Some(64));
1203 /// assert_eq!(TypeKind::Float { endian: Endianness::Native }.bit_width(), Some(32));
1204 /// assert_eq!(TypeKind::Double { endian: Endianness::Native }.bit_width(), Some(64));
1205 /// assert_eq!(TypeKind::String { max_length: None, flags: StringFlags::default() }.bit_width(), None);
1206 /// ```
1207 #[must_use]
1208 pub const fn bit_width(&self) -> Option<u32> {
1209 match self {
1210 Self::Byte { .. } => Some(8),
1211 Self::Short { .. } => Some(16),
1212 Self::Long { .. } | Self::Float { .. } | Self::Date { .. } => Some(32),
1213 Self::Quad { .. } | Self::Double { .. } | Self::QDate { .. } => Some(64),
1214 Self::String { .. }
1215 | Self::String16 { .. }
1216 | Self::PString { .. }
1217 | Self::Regex { .. }
1218 | Self::Search { .. }
1219 | Self::Meta(_) => None,
1220 }
1221 }
1222}
1223
1224/// Comparison and bitwise operators
1225#[derive(Debug, Clone, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
1226#[non_exhaustive]
1227pub enum Operator {
1228 /// Equality comparison (`=` or `==`)
1229 ///
1230 /// # Examples
1231 ///
1232 /// ```
1233 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1234 ///
1235 /// let op = Operator::Equal;
1236 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::Equal);
1237 /// ```
1238 Equal,
1239 /// Inequality comparison (`!=` or `<>`)
1240 ///
1241 /// # Examples
1242 ///
1243 /// ```
1244 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1245 ///
1246 /// let op = Operator::NotEqual;
1247 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::NotEqual);
1248 /// ```
1249 NotEqual,
1250 /// Less-than comparison (`<`)
1251 ///
1252 /// # Examples
1253 ///
1254 /// ```
1255 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1256 ///
1257 /// let op = Operator::LessThan;
1258 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::LessThan);
1259 /// ```
1260 LessThan,
1261 /// Greater-than comparison (`>`)
1262 ///
1263 /// # Examples
1264 ///
1265 /// ```
1266 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1267 ///
1268 /// let op = Operator::GreaterThan;
1269 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::GreaterThan);
1270 /// ```
1271 GreaterThan,
1272 /// Less-than-or-equal comparison (`<=`)
1273 ///
1274 /// # Examples
1275 ///
1276 /// ```
1277 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1278 ///
1279 /// let op = Operator::LessEqual;
1280 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::LessEqual);
1281 /// ```
1282 LessEqual,
1283 /// Greater-than-or-equal comparison (`>=`)
1284 ///
1285 /// # Examples
1286 ///
1287 /// ```
1288 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1289 ///
1290 /// let op = Operator::GreaterEqual;
1291 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::GreaterEqual);
1292 /// ```
1293 GreaterEqual,
1294 /// Bitwise AND operation without mask (`&`)
1295 ///
1296 /// # Examples
1297 ///
1298 /// ```
1299 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1300 ///
1301 /// let op = Operator::BitwiseAnd;
1302 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::BitwiseAnd);
1303 /// ```
1304 BitwiseAnd,
1305 /// Bitwise AND operation with mask value (`&` with a mask operand)
1306 ///
1307 /// # Examples
1308 ///
1309 /// ```
1310 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1311 ///
1312 /// let op = Operator::BitwiseAndMask(0xFF00);
1313 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::BitwiseAndMask(0xFF00));
1314 /// ```
1315 BitwiseAndMask(u64),
1316 /// Bitwise XOR operation (`^`)
1317 ///
1318 /// # Examples
1319 ///
1320 /// ```
1321 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1322 ///
1323 /// let op = Operator::BitwiseXor;
1324 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::BitwiseXor);
1325 /// ```
1326 BitwiseXor,
1327 /// Bitwise NOT/complement operation (`~`)
1328 ///
1329 /// # Examples
1330 ///
1331 /// ```
1332 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1333 ///
1334 /// let op = Operator::BitwiseNot;
1335 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::BitwiseNot);
1336 /// ```
1337 BitwiseNot,
1338 /// Match any value; condition always succeeds (`x`)
1339 ///
1340 /// # Examples
1341 ///
1342 /// ```
1343 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Operator;
1344 ///
1345 /// let op = Operator::AnyValue;
1346 /// assert_eq!(op, Operator::AnyValue);
1347 /// ```
1348 AnyValue,
1349}
1350
1351/// Value types for rule matching
1352#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Serialize, Deserialize)]
1353#[non_exhaustive]
1354pub enum Value {
1355 /// Unsigned integer value
1356 ///
1357 /// # Examples
1358 ///
1359 /// ```
1360 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Value;
1361 ///
1362 /// let val = Value::Uint(0xDEAD_BEEF);
1363 /// assert_eq!(val, Value::Uint(0xDEAD_BEEF));
1364 /// ```
1365 Uint(u64),
1366 /// Signed integer value
1367 ///
1368 /// # Examples
1369 ///
1370 /// ```
1371 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Value;
1372 ///
1373 /// let val = Value::Int(-42);
1374 /// assert_eq!(val, Value::Int(-42));
1375 /// ```
1376 Int(i64),
1377 /// Floating-point value (used for `float` and `double` types)
1378 ///
1379 /// # Examples
1380 ///
1381 /// ```
1382 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Value;
1383 ///
1384 /// let val = Value::Float(3.14);
1385 /// assert_eq!(val, Value::Float(3.14));
1386 /// ```
1387 Float(f64),
1388 /// Byte sequence
1389 ///
1390 /// # Examples
1391 ///
1392 /// ```
1393 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Value;
1394 ///
1395 /// let val = Value::Bytes(vec![0x7f, 0x45, 0x4c, 0x46]);
1396 /// assert_eq!(val, Value::Bytes(vec![0x7f, 0x45, 0x4c, 0x46]));
1397 /// ```
1398 Bytes(Vec<u8>),
1399 /// String value
1400 ///
1401 /// # Examples
1402 ///
1403 /// ```
1404 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Value;
1405 ///
1406 /// let val = Value::String("MZ".to_string());
1407 /// assert_eq!(val, Value::String("MZ".to_string()));
1408 /// ```
1409 String(String),
1410}
1411
1412/// Endianness specification for multi-byte values
1413#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
1414pub enum Endianness {
1415 /// Little-endian byte order (least significant byte first)
1416 ///
1417 /// # Examples
1418 ///
1419 /// ```
1420 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Endianness;
1421 ///
1422 /// let e = Endianness::Little;
1423 /// assert_eq!(e, Endianness::Little);
1424 /// ```
1425 Little,
1426 /// Big-endian byte order (most significant byte first)
1427 ///
1428 /// # Examples
1429 ///
1430 /// ```
1431 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Endianness;
1432 ///
1433 /// let e = Endianness::Big;
1434 /// assert_eq!(e, Endianness::Big);
1435 /// ```
1436 Big,
1437 /// Native system byte order (matches target architecture)
1438 ///
1439 /// # Examples
1440 ///
1441 /// ```
1442 /// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::Endianness;
1443 ///
1444 /// let e = Endianness::Native;
1445 /// assert_eq!(e, Endianness::Native);
1446 /// ```
1447 Native,
1448}
1449
1450/// Strength modifier for magic rules
1451///
1452/// Strength modifiers adjust the default strength calculation for a rule.
1453/// They are specified using the `!:strength` directive in magic files.
1454///
1455/// # Examples
1456///
1457/// ```
1458/// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::StrengthModifier;
1459///
1460/// let add = StrengthModifier::Add(10); // !:strength +10
1461/// let sub = StrengthModifier::Subtract(5); // !:strength -5
1462/// let mul = StrengthModifier::Multiply(2); // !:strength *2
1463/// let div = StrengthModifier::Divide(2); // !:strength /2
1464/// let set = StrengthModifier::Set(50); // !:strength =50
1465/// ```
1466#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq)]
1467pub enum StrengthModifier {
1468 /// Add to the default strength: `!:strength +N`
1469 Add(i32),
1470 /// Subtract from the default strength: `!:strength -N`
1471 Subtract(i32),
1472 /// Multiply the default strength: `!:strength *N`
1473 Multiply(i32),
1474 /// Divide the default strength: `!:strength /N`
1475 Divide(i32),
1476 /// Set strength to an absolute value: `!:strength =N` or `!:strength N`
1477 Set(i32),
1478}
1479
1480/// Arithmetic operation applied to a value read from the file *before* the
1481/// rule's comparison operator is evaluated.
1482///
1483/// magic(5) supports `+`, `-`, `*`, `/`, `%`, `|`, and `^` between the type
1484/// keyword and the comparison value (e.g., `lelong+1 x volume %d` reads a
1485/// long, adds 1, and formats the transformed value into the message).
1486/// Bitwise AND (`&MASK`) is *not* part of this enum because it is already
1487/// represented at the operator level via [`Operator::BitwiseAndMask`].
1488///
1489/// The operand is signed (`i64`) so that subtraction and negative multipliers
1490/// round-trip cleanly. Bitwise ops reinterpret the operand as a `u64` bit
1491/// pattern at evaluation time, matching libmagic's `apprentice.c::mconvert`.
1492#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, Serialize, Deserialize)]
1493#[non_exhaustive]
1494pub enum ValueTransformOp {
1495 /// Addition (`type+N`).
1496 Add,
1497 /// Subtraction (`type-N`).
1498 Sub,
1499 /// Multiplication (`type*N`).
1500 Mul,
1501 /// Truncating integer division (`type/N`). Division by zero is rejected
1502 /// at evaluation time.
1503 Div,
1504 /// Remainder (`type%N`). Modulo by zero is rejected at evaluation time.
1505 Mod,
1506 /// Bitwise AND (`type&N`).
1507 ///
1508 /// magic(5) `&MASK` was historically encoded at the operator level
1509 /// via [`Operator::BitwiseAndMask`] (which combines mask+equal in
1510 /// one step). That encoding cannot represent rules like `lelong&0xff
1511 /// x %d` (mask + any-value, with the masked value used in format
1512 /// substitution). The parser promotes `&MASK` to this `BitAnd`
1513 /// transform when followed by another operator (`x`, `>`, `!=`, ...)
1514 /// so the read value is masked before comparison and before printf
1515 /// substitution. The legacy `&MASK VALUE` form (mask + implicit
1516 /// equal) keeps using `Operator::BitwiseAndMask` for backwards
1517 /// compatibility.
1518 BitAnd,
1519 /// Bitwise OR (`type|N`).
1520 Or,
1521 /// Bitwise XOR (`type^N`).
1522 Xor,
1523}
1524
1525/// A pre-comparison value transform: `(op, operand)`.
1526///
1527/// Applied to the value read from the file before the rule's comparison
1528/// operator runs. See [`ValueTransformOp`] for the supported operations.
1529///
1530/// # Examples
1531///
1532/// ```
1533/// use libmagic_rs::parser::ast::{ValueTransform, ValueTransformOp};
1534///
1535/// // `lelong+1` -> add 1 to the read value
1536/// let t = ValueTransform { op: ValueTransformOp::Add, operand: 1 };
1537/// assert_eq!(t.op, ValueTransformOp::Add);
1538/// assert_eq!(t.operand, 1);
1539/// ```
1540#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, Serialize, Deserialize)]
1541pub struct ValueTransform {
1542 /// Operation to apply.
1543 pub op: ValueTransformOp,
1544 /// Operand to combine with the read value.
1545 pub operand: i64,
1546}
1547
1548/// Magic rule representation in the AST
1549#[derive(Debug, Clone, Serialize, Deserialize)]
1550pub struct MagicRule {
1551 /// Offset specification for where to read data
1552 pub offset: OffsetSpec,
1553 /// Type of data to read and interpret
1554 pub typ: TypeKind,
1555 /// Comparison operator to apply
1556 pub op: Operator,
1557 /// Expected value for comparison
1558 pub value: Value,
1559 /// Human-readable message for this rule
1560 pub message: String,
1561 /// Child rules that are evaluated if this rule matches
1562 pub children: Vec<MagicRule>,
1563 /// Indentation level for hierarchical rules
1564 pub level: u32,
1565 /// Optional strength modifier from `!:strength` directive
1566 pub strength_modifier: Option<StrengthModifier>,
1567 /// Optional pre-comparison value transform from a magic-file
1568 /// type-suffix like `lelong+1` or `ulequad/1073741824`. When set,
1569 /// the read value is transformed *before* `op` is evaluated and
1570 /// before the message's `%`-format substitution, so format
1571 /// specifiers see the post-transform number.
1572 ///
1573 /// `#[serde(default)]` keeps existing serialized AST snapshots
1574 /// (which never had this field) round-tripping correctly: missing
1575 /// fields deserialize to `None`, which means "no transform" --
1576 /// the historical behavior.
1577 #[serde(default)]
1578 pub value_transform: Option<ValueTransform>,
1579}
1580
1581/// Validation errors returned by [`MagicRule::validate`].
1582#[derive(Debug, thiserror::Error, PartialEq, Eq)]
1583#[non_exhaustive]
1584pub enum MagicRuleValidationError {
1585 /// Rule message is empty. Messages are user-facing and required
1586 /// for meaningful output.
1587 #[error("rule message must not be empty")]
1588 EmptyMessage,
1589
1590 /// The child rule at `child_index` has `level <= self.level`,
1591 /// violating the "children must nest deeper than the parent"
1592 /// invariant of the hierarchical indentation-based DSL.
1593 #[error(
1594 "child rule at index {child_index} has level {child_level}, \
1595 must be greater than parent level {parent_level}"
1596 )]
1597 InvalidChildLevel {
1598 /// Index of the offending child in `self.children`.
1599 child_index: usize,
1600 /// Level of the child rule.
1601 child_level: u32,
1602 /// Level of the parent rule.
1603 parent_level: u32,
1604 },
1605
1606 /// Rule `level` exceeds the maximum supported depth. The limit is a
1607 /// hardening mechanism against stack overflow during deep recursion;
1608 /// libmagic files in the wild rarely go beyond 10 levels.
1609 #[error("rule level {level} exceeds maximum supported depth {max}")]
1610 LevelTooDeep {
1611 /// The invalid level value.
1612 level: u32,
1613 /// The maximum allowed depth.
1614 max: u32,
1615 },
1616}
1617
1618impl MagicRule {
1619 /// Hard structural ceiling on rule `level`.
1620 ///
1621 /// This is a conservative upper bound enforced by
1622 /// [`MagicRule::validate`] to keep the AST shape sane: real
1623 /// magic files in the wild rarely exceed ~10 levels of nesting,
1624 /// so rejecting rules with `level > 1000` catches obviously
1625 /// pathological input at construction time without constraining
1626 /// any legitimate rule.
1627 ///
1628 /// This ceiling is **independent of** the evaluator's
1629 /// `EvaluationConfig::max_recursion_depth` (default 20), which
1630 /// is the *runtime* recursion guard applied during rule
1631 /// evaluation. The evaluator limit is the first one that fires
1632 /// in practice -- a rule tree with 50 levels passes this
1633 /// structural check but is aborted by the evaluator long before
1634 /// reaching `MAX_LEVEL`. The two limits serve different purposes:
1635 /// `MAX_LEVEL` is an AST-shape sanity check, and
1636 /// `max_recursion_depth` is a per-evaluation resource bound.
1637 pub const MAX_LEVEL: u32 = 1000;
1638
1639 /// Construct a top-level rule with no children and no strength
1640 /// modifier.
1641 ///
1642 /// This is the most common constructor for programmatically building
1643 /// rules outside the parser. To add children, mutate
1644 /// [`MagicRule::children`] directly, or use [`MagicRule::with_children`].
1645 /// To set a strength modifier, use
1646 /// [`MagicRule::with_strength_modifier`].
1647 ///
1648 /// # Examples
1649 ///
1650 /// ```rust
1651 /// use libmagic_rs::{MagicRule, OffsetSpec, Operator, TypeKind, Value};
1652 ///
1653 /// let rule = MagicRule::new(
1654 /// OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
1655 /// TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1656 /// Operator::Equal,
1657 /// Value::Uint(0x7f),
1658 /// "ELF magic byte".to_string(),
1659 /// );
1660 /// assert_eq!(rule.level, 0);
1661 /// assert!(rule.children.is_empty());
1662 /// assert!(rule.validate().is_ok());
1663 /// ```
1664 #[must_use]
1665 pub fn new(
1666 offset: OffsetSpec,
1667 typ: TypeKind,
1668 op: Operator,
1669 value: Value,
1670 message: String,
1671 ) -> Self {
1672 Self {
1673 offset,
1674 typ,
1675 op,
1676 value,
1677 message,
1678 children: vec![],
1679 level: 0,
1680 strength_modifier: None,
1681 value_transform: None,
1682 }
1683 }
1684
1685 /// Replace `self.children` with the given children and return the
1686 /// modified rule. Builder-style for chaining.
1687 #[must_use]
1688 pub fn with_children(mut self, children: Vec<MagicRule>) -> Self {
1689 self.children = children;
1690 self
1691 }
1692
1693 /// Set `self.strength_modifier` to the given value and return the
1694 /// modified rule. Builder-style for chaining.
1695 #[must_use]
1696 pub const fn with_strength_modifier(mut self, modifier: StrengthModifier) -> Self {
1697 self.strength_modifier = Some(modifier);
1698 self
1699 }
1700
1701 /// Set `self.level` to the given value and return the modified rule.
1702 /// Builder-style for chaining; typically used only when constructing
1703 /// child rules programmatically.
1704 #[must_use]
1705 pub const fn with_level(mut self, level: u32) -> Self {
1706 self.level = level;
1707 self
1708 }
1709
1710 /// Validate structural invariants of the rule.
1711 ///
1712 /// This checks invariants that the parser enforces automatically but
1713 /// that programmatic constructors (especially via serde deserialize)
1714 /// can violate:
1715 ///
1716 /// * Message must not be empty.
1717 /// * `level` must not exceed [`Self::MAX_LEVEL`].
1718 /// * Every child's `level` must be strictly greater than
1719 /// `self.level`, and each child must recursively validate.
1720 ///
1721 /// This does *not* validate that `value` is shape-compatible with
1722 /// `typ` (e.g., a `Value::Uint` against a `TypeKind::String`); such
1723 /// mismatches are coerced or rejected by the evaluator at match time.
1724 ///
1725 /// # Errors
1726 ///
1727 /// Returns [`MagicRuleValidationError`] describing the first
1728 /// invariant violation encountered.
1729 ///
1730 /// # Examples
1731 ///
1732 /// ```rust
1733 /// use libmagic_rs::{MagicRule, OffsetSpec, Operator, TypeKind, Value};
1734 ///
1735 /// let rule = MagicRule::new(
1736 /// OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
1737 /// TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1738 /// Operator::Equal,
1739 /// Value::Uint(0),
1740 /// "zero byte".to_string(),
1741 /// );
1742 /// assert!(rule.validate().is_ok());
1743 /// ```
1744 pub fn validate(&self) -> Result<(), MagicRuleValidationError> {
1745 if self.message.is_empty() {
1746 return Err(MagicRuleValidationError::EmptyMessage);
1747 }
1748 if self.level > Self::MAX_LEVEL {
1749 return Err(MagicRuleValidationError::LevelTooDeep {
1750 level: self.level,
1751 max: Self::MAX_LEVEL,
1752 });
1753 }
1754 for (child_index, child) in self.children.iter().enumerate() {
1755 if child.level <= self.level {
1756 return Err(MagicRuleValidationError::InvalidChildLevel {
1757 child_index,
1758 child_level: child.level,
1759 parent_level: self.level,
1760 });
1761 }
1762 child.validate()?;
1763 }
1764 Ok(())
1765 }
1766}
1767
1768#[cfg(test)]
1769mod tests {
1770 use super::*;
1771
1772 #[test]
1773 fn test_magic_rule_new_defaults() {
1774 let rule = MagicRule::new(
1775 OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
1776 TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1777 Operator::Equal,
1778 Value::Uint(0x7f),
1779 "ELF".to_string(),
1780 );
1781 assert_eq!(rule.level, 0);
1782 assert!(rule.children.is_empty());
1783 assert!(rule.strength_modifier.is_none());
1784 assert!(rule.validate().is_ok());
1785 }
1786
1787 #[test]
1788 fn test_magic_rule_builder_chain() {
1789 let child = MagicRule::new(
1790 OffsetSpec::Absolute(4),
1791 TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1792 Operator::Equal,
1793 Value::Uint(2),
1794 "64-bit".to_string(),
1795 )
1796 .with_level(1);
1797 let parent = MagicRule::new(
1798 OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
1799 TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1800 Operator::Equal,
1801 Value::Uint(0x7f),
1802 "ELF".to_string(),
1803 )
1804 .with_children(vec![child])
1805 .with_strength_modifier(StrengthModifier::Add(10));
1806 assert_eq!(parent.children.len(), 1);
1807 assert_eq!(parent.strength_modifier, Some(StrengthModifier::Add(10)));
1808 assert!(parent.validate().is_ok());
1809 }
1810
1811 #[test]
1812 fn test_magic_rule_validate_empty_message_rejected() {
1813 let rule = MagicRule::new(
1814 OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
1815 TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1816 Operator::Equal,
1817 Value::Uint(0),
1818 String::new(),
1819 );
1820 assert_eq!(rule.validate(), Err(MagicRuleValidationError::EmptyMessage));
1821 }
1822
1823 #[test]
1824 fn test_magic_rule_validate_child_level_must_be_deeper() {
1825 let child_same_level = MagicRule::new(
1826 OffsetSpec::Absolute(4),
1827 TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1828 Operator::Equal,
1829 Value::Uint(2),
1830 "child".to_string(),
1831 ); // level = 0, same as parent
1832 let parent = MagicRule::new(
1833 OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
1834 TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1835 Operator::Equal,
1836 Value::Uint(0x7f),
1837 "parent".to_string(),
1838 )
1839 .with_children(vec![child_same_level]);
1840 assert_eq!(
1841 parent.validate(),
1842 Err(MagicRuleValidationError::InvalidChildLevel {
1843 child_index: 0,
1844 child_level: 0,
1845 parent_level: 0,
1846 })
1847 );
1848 }
1849
1850 #[test]
1851 fn test_magic_rule_validate_level_too_deep() {
1852 let rule = MagicRule::new(
1853 OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
1854 TypeKind::Byte { signed: false },
1855 Operator::Equal,
1856 Value::Uint(0),
1857 "deep".to_string(),
1858 )
1859 .with_level(MagicRule::MAX_LEVEL + 1);
1860 assert_eq!(
1861 rule.validate(),
1862 Err(MagicRuleValidationError::LevelTooDeep {
1863 level: MagicRule::MAX_LEVEL + 1,
1864 max: MagicRule::MAX_LEVEL,
1865 })
1866 );
1867 }
1868
1869 #[test]
1870 fn test_offset_spec_absolute() {
1871 let offset = OffsetSpec::Absolute(42);
1872 assert_eq!(offset, OffsetSpec::Absolute(42));
1873
1874 // Test negative offset
1875 let negative = OffsetSpec::Absolute(-10);
1876 assert_eq!(negative, OffsetSpec::Absolute(-10));
1877 }
1878
1879 #[test]
1880 fn test_offset_spec_indirect() {
1881 let indirect = OffsetSpec::Indirect {
1882 base_offset: 0x20,
1883 base_relative: false,
1884 pointer_type: TypeKind::Long {
1885 endian: Endianness::Little,
1886 signed: false,
1887 },
1888 adjustment: 4,
1889 adjustment_op: IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add,
1890 result_relative: false,
1891 endian: Endianness::Little,
1892 };
1893
1894 match indirect {
1895 OffsetSpec::Indirect {
1896 base_offset,
1897 adjustment,
1898 ..
1899 } => {
1900 assert_eq!(base_offset, 0x20);
1901 assert_eq!(adjustment, 4);
1902 }
1903 _ => panic!("Expected Indirect variant"),
1904 }
1905 }
1906
1907 #[test]
1908 fn test_offset_spec_relative() {
1909 let relative = OffsetSpec::Relative(8);
1910 assert_eq!(relative, OffsetSpec::Relative(8));
1911
1912 // Test negative relative offset
1913 let negative_relative = OffsetSpec::Relative(-4);
1914 assert_eq!(negative_relative, OffsetSpec::Relative(-4));
1915 }
1916
1917 #[test]
1918 fn test_offset_spec_from_end() {
1919 let from_end = OffsetSpec::FromEnd(-16);
1920 assert_eq!(from_end, OffsetSpec::FromEnd(-16));
1921
1922 // Test positive from_end (though unusual)
1923 let positive_from_end = OffsetSpec::FromEnd(8);
1924 assert_eq!(positive_from_end, OffsetSpec::FromEnd(8));
1925 }
1926
1927 #[test]
1928 fn test_offset_spec_debug() {
1929 let offset = OffsetSpec::Absolute(100);
1930 let debug_str = format!("{offset:?}");
1931 assert!(debug_str.contains("Absolute"));
1932 assert!(debug_str.contains("100"));
1933 }
1934
1935 #[test]
1936 fn test_offset_spec_clone() {
1937 let original = OffsetSpec::Indirect {
1938 base_offset: 0x10,
1939 base_relative: false,
1940 pointer_type: TypeKind::Short {
1941 endian: Endianness::Big,
1942 signed: true,
1943 },
1944 adjustment: -2,
1945 adjustment_op: IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add,
1946 result_relative: false,
1947 endian: Endianness::Big,
1948 };
1949
1950 let cloned = original.clone();
1951 assert_eq!(original, cloned);
1952 }
1953
1954 #[test]
1955 fn test_offset_spec_serialization() {
1956 let offset = OffsetSpec::Absolute(42);
1957
1958 // Test JSON serialization
1959 let json = serde_json::to_string(&offset).expect("Failed to serialize");
1960 let deserialized: OffsetSpec = serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize");
1961
1962 assert_eq!(offset, deserialized);
1963 }
1964
1965 #[test]
1966 fn test_offset_spec_indirect_serialization() {
1967 let indirect = OffsetSpec::Indirect {
1968 base_offset: 0x100,
1969 base_relative: false,
1970 pointer_type: TypeKind::Long {
1971 endian: Endianness::Native,
1972 signed: false,
1973 },
1974 adjustment: 12,
1975 adjustment_op: IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add,
1976 result_relative: false,
1977 endian: Endianness::Native,
1978 };
1979
1980 // Test JSON serialization for complex variant
1981 let json = serde_json::to_string(&indirect).expect("Failed to serialize");
1982 let deserialized: OffsetSpec = serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize");
1983
1984 assert_eq!(indirect, deserialized);
1985 }
1986
1987 #[test]
1988 fn test_all_offset_spec_variants() {
1989 let variants = [
1990 OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
1991 OffsetSpec::Absolute(-100),
1992 OffsetSpec::Indirect {
1993 base_offset: 0x20,
1994 base_relative: false,
1995 pointer_type: TypeKind::Byte { signed: true },
1996 adjustment: 0,
1997 adjustment_op: IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add,
1998 result_relative: false,
1999 endian: Endianness::Little,
2000 },
2001 OffsetSpec::Relative(50),
2002 OffsetSpec::Relative(-25),
2003 OffsetSpec::FromEnd(-8),
2004 OffsetSpec::FromEnd(4),
2005 ];
2006
2007 // Test that all variants can be created and are distinct
2008 for (i, variant) in variants.iter().enumerate() {
2009 for (j, other) in variants.iter().enumerate() {
2010 if i != j {
2011 assert_ne!(
2012 variant, other,
2013 "Variants at indices {i} and {j} should be different"
2014 );
2015 }
2016 }
2017 }
2018 }
2019
2020 #[test]
2021 fn test_endianness_variants() {
2022 let endianness_values = vec![Endianness::Little, Endianness::Big, Endianness::Native];
2023
2024 for endian in endianness_values {
2025 let indirect = OffsetSpec::Indirect {
2026 base_offset: 0,
2027 base_relative: false,
2028 pointer_type: TypeKind::Long {
2029 endian,
2030 signed: false,
2031 },
2032 adjustment: 0,
2033 adjustment_op: IndirectAdjustmentOp::Add,
2034 result_relative: false,
2035 endian,
2036 };
2037
2038 // Verify the endianness is preserved
2039 match indirect {
2040 OffsetSpec::Indirect {
2041 endian: actual_endian,
2042 ..
2043 } => {
2044 assert_eq!(endian, actual_endian);
2045 }
2046 _ => panic!("Expected Indirect variant"),
2047 }
2048 }
2049 }
2050
2051 // Value enum tests
2052 #[test]
2053 fn test_value_uint() {
2054 let value = Value::Uint(42);
2055 assert_eq!(value, Value::Uint(42));
2056
2057 // Test large values
2058 let large_value = Value::Uint(u64::MAX);
2059 assert_eq!(large_value, Value::Uint(u64::MAX));
2060 }
2061
2062 #[test]
2063 fn test_value_int() {
2064 let positive = Value::Int(100);
2065 assert_eq!(positive, Value::Int(100));
2066
2067 let negative = Value::Int(-50);
2068 assert_eq!(negative, Value::Int(-50));
2069
2070 // Test extreme values
2071 let max_int = Value::Int(i64::MAX);
2072 let min_int = Value::Int(i64::MIN);
2073 assert_eq!(max_int, Value::Int(i64::MAX));
2074 assert_eq!(min_int, Value::Int(i64::MIN));
2075 }
2076
2077 #[test]
2078 fn test_value_bytes() {
2079 let empty_bytes = Value::Bytes(vec![]);
2080 assert_eq!(empty_bytes, Value::Bytes(vec![]));
2081
2082 let some_bytes = Value::Bytes(vec![0x7f, 0x45, 0x4c, 0x46]);
2083 assert_eq!(some_bytes, Value::Bytes(vec![0x7f, 0x45, 0x4c, 0x46]));
2084
2085 // Test that different byte sequences are not equal
2086 let other_bytes = Value::Bytes(vec![0x50, 0x4b, 0x03, 0x04]);
2087 assert_ne!(some_bytes, other_bytes);
2088 }
2089
2090 #[test]
2091 fn test_value_string() {
2092 let empty_string = Value::String(String::new());
2093 assert_eq!(empty_string, Value::String(String::new()));
2094
2095 let hello = Value::String("Hello, World!".to_string());
2096 assert_eq!(hello, Value::String("Hello, World!".to_string()));
2097
2098 // Test Unicode strings
2099 let unicode = Value::String("🦀 Rust".to_string());
2100 assert_eq!(unicode, Value::String("🦀 Rust".to_string()));
2101 }
2102
2103 #[test]
2104 fn test_value_comparison() {
2105 // Test that different value types are not equal
2106 let uint_val = Value::Uint(42);
2107 let int_val = Value::Int(42);
2108 let float_val = Value::Float(42.0);
2109 let bytes_val = Value::Bytes(vec![42]);
2110 let string_val = Value::String("42".to_string());
2111
2112 assert_ne!(uint_val, int_val);
2113 assert_ne!(uint_val, float_val);
2114 assert_ne!(uint_val, bytes_val);
2115 assert_ne!(uint_val, string_val);
2116 assert_ne!(int_val, float_val);
2117 assert_ne!(int_val, bytes_val);
2118 assert_ne!(int_val, string_val);
2119 assert_ne!(float_val, bytes_val);
2120 assert_ne!(float_val, string_val);
2121 assert_ne!(bytes_val, string_val);
2122 }
2123
2124 #[test]
2125 fn test_value_debug() {
2126 let uint_val = Value::Uint(123);
2127 let debug_str = format!("{uint_val:?}");
2128 assert!(debug_str.contains("Uint"));
2129 assert!(debug_str.contains("123"));
2130
2131 let string_val = Value::String("test".to_string());
2132 let debug_str = format!("{string_val:?}");
2133 assert!(debug_str.contains("String"));
2134 assert!(debug_str.contains("test"));
2135 }
2136
2137 #[test]
2138 fn test_value_clone() {
2139 let original = Value::Bytes(vec![1, 2, 3, 4]);
2140 let cloned = original.clone();
2141 assert_eq!(original, cloned);
2142
2143 // Verify they are independent copies
2144 match (original, cloned) {
2145 (Value::Bytes(orig_bytes), Value::Bytes(cloned_bytes)) => {
2146 assert_eq!(orig_bytes, cloned_bytes);
2147 // They should have the same content but be different Vec instances
2148 }
2149 _ => panic!("Expected Bytes variants"),
2150 }
2151 }
2152
2153 #[test]
2154 fn test_value_float() {
2155 let value = Value::Float(3.125);
2156 assert_eq!(value, Value::Float(3.125));
2157
2158 let negative = Value::Float(-1.5);
2159 assert_eq!(negative, Value::Float(-1.5));
2160
2161 let zero = Value::Float(0.0);
2162 assert_eq!(zero, Value::Float(0.0));
2163 }
2164
2165 #[test]
2166 fn test_value_serialization() {
2167 let values = vec![
2168 Value::Uint(42),
2169 Value::Int(-100),
2170 Value::Float(3.125),
2171 Value::Bytes(vec![0x7f, 0x45, 0x4c, 0x46]),
2172 Value::String("ELF executable".to_string()),
2173 ];
2174
2175 for value in values {
2176 // Test JSON serialization
2177 let json = serde_json::to_string(&value).expect("Failed to serialize Value");
2178 let deserialized: Value =
2179 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize Value");
2180 assert_eq!(value, deserialized);
2181 }
2182 }
2183
2184 #[test]
2185 fn test_value_serialization_edge_cases() {
2186 // Test empty collections
2187 let empty_bytes = Value::Bytes(vec![]);
2188 let json = serde_json::to_string(&empty_bytes).expect("Failed to serialize empty bytes");
2189 let deserialized: Value =
2190 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize empty bytes");
2191 assert_eq!(empty_bytes, deserialized);
2192
2193 let empty_string = Value::String(String::new());
2194 let json = serde_json::to_string(&empty_string).expect("Failed to serialize empty string");
2195 let deserialized: Value =
2196 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize empty string");
2197 assert_eq!(empty_string, deserialized);
2198
2199 // Test extreme values
2200 let max_uint = Value::Uint(u64::MAX);
2201 let json = serde_json::to_string(&max_uint).expect("Failed to serialize max uint");
2202 let deserialized: Value =
2203 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize max uint");
2204 assert_eq!(max_uint, deserialized);
2205
2206 let min_int = Value::Int(i64::MIN);
2207 let json = serde_json::to_string(&min_int).expect("Failed to serialize min int");
2208 let deserialized: Value =
2209 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize min int");
2210 assert_eq!(min_int, deserialized);
2211 }
2212
2213 // TypeKind tests
2214 #[test]
2215 fn test_type_kind_byte() {
2216 let byte_type = TypeKind::Byte { signed: true };
2217 assert_eq!(byte_type, TypeKind::Byte { signed: true });
2218 }
2219
2220 #[test]
2221 fn test_type_kind_short() {
2222 let short_little_endian = TypeKind::Short {
2223 endian: Endianness::Little,
2224 signed: false,
2225 };
2226 let short_big_endian = TypeKind::Short {
2227 endian: Endianness::Big,
2228 signed: true,
2229 };
2230
2231 assert_ne!(short_little_endian, short_big_endian);
2232 assert_eq!(short_little_endian, short_little_endian.clone());
2233 }
2234
2235 #[test]
2236 fn test_type_kind_long() {
2237 let long_native = TypeKind::Long {
2238 endian: Endianness::Native,
2239 signed: true,
2240 };
2241
2242 match long_native {
2243 TypeKind::Long { endian, signed } => {
2244 assert_eq!(endian, Endianness::Native);
2245 assert!(signed);
2246 }
2247 _ => panic!("Expected Long variant"),
2248 }
2249 }
2250
2251 #[test]
2252 fn test_type_kind_string() {
2253 let unlimited_string = TypeKind::String {
2254 max_length: None,
2255 flags: StringFlags::default(),
2256 };
2257 let limited_string = TypeKind::String {
2258 max_length: Some(256),
2259 flags: StringFlags::default(),
2260 };
2261
2262 assert_ne!(unlimited_string, limited_string);
2263 assert_eq!(unlimited_string, unlimited_string.clone());
2264 }
2265
2266 #[test]
2267 fn test_type_kind_serialization() {
2268 let types = vec![
2269 TypeKind::Byte { signed: true },
2270 TypeKind::Short {
2271 endian: Endianness::Little,
2272 signed: false,
2273 },
2274 TypeKind::Long {
2275 endian: Endianness::Big,
2276 signed: true,
2277 },
2278 TypeKind::Quad {
2279 endian: Endianness::Little,
2280 signed: false,
2281 },
2282 TypeKind::Quad {
2283 endian: Endianness::Big,
2284 signed: true,
2285 },
2286 TypeKind::Float {
2287 endian: Endianness::Native,
2288 },
2289 TypeKind::Float {
2290 endian: Endianness::Big,
2291 },
2292 TypeKind::Double {
2293 endian: Endianness::Little,
2294 },
2295 TypeKind::Double {
2296 endian: Endianness::Native,
2297 },
2298 TypeKind::Date {
2299 endian: Endianness::Big,
2300 utc: true,
2301 },
2302 TypeKind::Date {
2303 endian: Endianness::Little,
2304 utc: false,
2305 },
2306 TypeKind::QDate {
2307 endian: Endianness::Native,
2308 utc: true,
2309 },
2310 TypeKind::QDate {
2311 endian: Endianness::Big,
2312 utc: false,
2313 },
2314 TypeKind::String {
2315 max_length: None,
2316 flags: StringFlags::default(),
2317 },
2318 TypeKind::String {
2319 max_length: Some(128),
2320 flags: StringFlags::default(),
2321 },
2322 TypeKind::PString {
2323 max_length: None,
2324 length_width: PStringLengthWidth::OneByte,
2325 length_includes_itself: false,
2326 },
2327 TypeKind::PString {
2328 max_length: Some(64),
2329 length_width: PStringLengthWidth::OneByte,
2330 length_includes_itself: false,
2331 },
2332 TypeKind::PString {
2333 max_length: None,
2334 length_width: PStringLengthWidth::TwoByteBE,
2335 length_includes_itself: true,
2336 },
2337 TypeKind::PString {
2338 max_length: Some(128),
2339 length_width: PStringLengthWidth::FourByteLE,
2340 length_includes_itself: false,
2341 },
2342 ];
2343
2344 for typ in types {
2345 let json = serde_json::to_string(&typ).expect("Failed to serialize TypeKind");
2346 let deserialized: TypeKind =
2347 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize TypeKind");
2348 assert_eq!(typ, deserialized);
2349 }
2350 }
2351
2352 // Operator tests
2353 #[test]
2354 fn test_operator_variants() {
2355 let operators = [
2356 Operator::Equal,
2357 Operator::NotEqual,
2358 Operator::BitwiseAnd,
2359 Operator::BitwiseXor,
2360 Operator::BitwiseNot,
2361 Operator::AnyValue,
2362 ];
2363
2364 for (i, op) in operators.iter().enumerate() {
2365 for (j, other) in operators.iter().enumerate() {
2366 if i == j {
2367 assert_eq!(op, other);
2368 } else {
2369 assert_ne!(op, other);
2370 }
2371 }
2372 }
2373 }
2374
2375 #[test]
2376 fn test_operator_serialization() {
2377 let operators = vec![
2378 Operator::Equal,
2379 Operator::NotEqual,
2380 Operator::BitwiseAnd,
2381 Operator::BitwiseXor,
2382 Operator::BitwiseNot,
2383 Operator::AnyValue,
2384 ];
2385
2386 for op in operators {
2387 let json = serde_json::to_string(&op).expect("Failed to serialize Operator");
2388 let deserialized: Operator =
2389 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize Operator");
2390 assert_eq!(op, deserialized);
2391 }
2392 }
2393
2394 // MagicRule tests
2395 #[test]
2396 fn test_magic_rule_creation() {
2397 let rule = MagicRule {
2398 offset: OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
2399 typ: TypeKind::Byte { signed: true },
2400 op: Operator::Equal,
2401 value: Value::Uint(0x7f),
2402 message: "ELF magic".to_string(),
2403 children: vec![],
2404 level: 0,
2405 strength_modifier: None,
2406 value_transform: None,
2407 };
2408
2409 assert_eq!(rule.message, "ELF magic");
2410 assert_eq!(rule.level, 0);
2411 assert!(rule.children.is_empty());
2412 }
2413
2414 #[test]
2415 fn test_magic_rule_with_children() {
2416 let child_rule = MagicRule {
2417 offset: OffsetSpec::Absolute(4),
2418 typ: TypeKind::Byte { signed: true },
2419 op: Operator::Equal,
2420 value: Value::Uint(1),
2421 message: "32-bit".to_string(),
2422 children: vec![],
2423 level: 1,
2424 strength_modifier: None,
2425 value_transform: None,
2426 };
2427
2428 let parent_rule = MagicRule {
2429 offset: OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
2430 typ: TypeKind::Long {
2431 endian: Endianness::Little,
2432 signed: false,
2433 },
2434 op: Operator::Equal,
2435 value: Value::Bytes(vec![0x7f, 0x45, 0x4c, 0x46]),
2436 message: "ELF executable".to_string(),
2437 children: vec![child_rule],
2438 level: 0,
2439 strength_modifier: None,
2440 value_transform: None,
2441 };
2442
2443 assert_eq!(parent_rule.children.len(), 1);
2444 assert_eq!(parent_rule.children[0].level, 1);
2445 assert_eq!(parent_rule.children[0].message, "32-bit");
2446 }
2447
2448 #[test]
2449 fn test_magic_rule_serialization() {
2450 let rule = MagicRule {
2451 offset: OffsetSpec::Absolute(16),
2452 typ: TypeKind::Short {
2453 endian: Endianness::Little,
2454 signed: false,
2455 },
2456 op: Operator::NotEqual,
2457 value: Value::Uint(0),
2458 message: "Non-zero short value".to_string(),
2459 children: vec![],
2460 level: 2,
2461 strength_modifier: None,
2462 value_transform: None,
2463 };
2464
2465 let json = serde_json::to_string(&rule).expect("Failed to serialize MagicRule");
2466 let deserialized: MagicRule =
2467 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize MagicRule");
2468
2469 assert_eq!(rule.message, deserialized.message);
2470 assert_eq!(rule.level, deserialized.level);
2471 assert_eq!(rule.children.len(), deserialized.children.len());
2472 }
2473
2474 // StrengthModifier tests
2475 #[test]
2476 fn test_strength_modifier_variants() {
2477 let add = StrengthModifier::Add(10);
2478 let sub = StrengthModifier::Subtract(5);
2479 let mul = StrengthModifier::Multiply(2);
2480 let div = StrengthModifier::Divide(2);
2481 let set = StrengthModifier::Set(50);
2482
2483 // Test that each variant has the correct inner value
2484 assert_eq!(add, StrengthModifier::Add(10));
2485 assert_eq!(sub, StrengthModifier::Subtract(5));
2486 assert_eq!(mul, StrengthModifier::Multiply(2));
2487 assert_eq!(div, StrengthModifier::Divide(2));
2488 assert_eq!(set, StrengthModifier::Set(50));
2489
2490 // Test that different variants are not equal
2491 assert_ne!(add, sub);
2492 assert_ne!(mul, div);
2493 assert_ne!(set, add);
2494 }
2495
2496 #[test]
2497 fn test_strength_modifier_negative_values() {
2498 let add_negative = StrengthModifier::Add(-10);
2499 let sub_negative = StrengthModifier::Subtract(-5);
2500 let set_negative = StrengthModifier::Set(-50);
2501
2502 assert_eq!(add_negative, StrengthModifier::Add(-10));
2503 assert_eq!(sub_negative, StrengthModifier::Subtract(-5));
2504 assert_eq!(set_negative, StrengthModifier::Set(-50));
2505 }
2506
2507 #[test]
2508 fn test_strength_modifier_serialization() {
2509 let modifiers = vec![
2510 StrengthModifier::Add(10),
2511 StrengthModifier::Subtract(5),
2512 StrengthModifier::Multiply(2),
2513 StrengthModifier::Divide(3),
2514 StrengthModifier::Set(100),
2515 ];
2516
2517 for modifier in modifiers {
2518 let json =
2519 serde_json::to_string(&modifier).expect("Failed to serialize StrengthModifier");
2520 let deserialized: StrengthModifier =
2521 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize StrengthModifier");
2522 assert_eq!(modifier, deserialized);
2523 }
2524 }
2525
2526 #[test]
2527 fn test_strength_modifier_debug() {
2528 let modifier = StrengthModifier::Add(25);
2529 let debug_str = format!("{modifier:?}");
2530 assert!(debug_str.contains("Add"));
2531 assert!(debug_str.contains("25"));
2532 }
2533
2534 #[test]
2535 fn test_strength_modifier_clone() {
2536 let original = StrengthModifier::Multiply(4);
2537 let cloned = original;
2538 assert_eq!(original, cloned);
2539 }
2540
2541 #[test]
2542 fn test_magic_rule_with_strength_modifier() {
2543 let rule = MagicRule {
2544 offset: OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
2545 typ: TypeKind::Byte { signed: true },
2546 op: Operator::Equal,
2547 value: Value::Uint(0x7f),
2548 message: "ELF magic".to_string(),
2549 children: vec![],
2550 level: 0,
2551 strength_modifier: Some(StrengthModifier::Add(20)),
2552 value_transform: None,
2553 };
2554
2555 assert_eq!(rule.strength_modifier, Some(StrengthModifier::Add(20)));
2556
2557 // Test serialization with strength_modifier
2558 let json = serde_json::to_string(&rule).expect("Failed to serialize MagicRule");
2559 let deserialized: MagicRule =
2560 serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("Failed to deserialize MagicRule");
2561 assert_eq!(rule.strength_modifier, deserialized.strength_modifier);
2562 }
2563
2564 #[test]
2565 fn test_magic_rule_without_strength_modifier() {
2566 let rule = MagicRule {
2567 offset: OffsetSpec::Absolute(0),
2568 typ: TypeKind::Byte { signed: true },
2569 op: Operator::Equal,
2570 value: Value::Uint(0x7f),
2571 message: "ELF magic".to_string(),
2572 children: vec![],
2573 level: 0,
2574 strength_modifier: None,
2575 value_transform: None,
2576 };
2577
2578 assert_eq!(rule.strength_modifier, None);
2579 }
2580
2581 // MetaType tests
2582 #[test]
2583 fn test_meta_type_variants_debug_clone_eq() {
2584 let cases = [
2585 MetaType::Default,
2586 MetaType::Clear,
2587 MetaType::Indirect,
2588 MetaType::Offset,
2589 MetaType::Name("part2".to_string()),
2590 MetaType::Use("part2".to_string()),
2591 ];
2592
2593 for (i, variant) in cases.iter().enumerate() {
2594 // Debug formatting is non-empty
2595 let debug_str = format!("{variant:?}");
2596 assert!(
2597 !debug_str.is_empty(),
2598 "Debug format must be non-empty for variant at index {i}"
2599 );
2600
2601 // Clone round-trip preserves equality
2602 let cloned = variant.clone();
2603 assert_eq!(
2604 variant, &cloned,
2605 "Clone must preserve equality for variant at index {i}"
2606 );
2607
2608 // Distinct variants are not equal
2609 for (j, other) in cases.iter().enumerate() {
2610 if i == j {
2611 assert_eq!(variant, other);
2612 } else {
2613 assert_ne!(
2614 variant, other,
2615 "Variants at indices {i} and {j} must differ"
2616 );
2617 }
2618 }
2619 }
2620 }
2621
2622 #[test]
2623 fn test_meta_type_serde_roundtrip() {
2624 let cases = [
2625 MetaType::Default,
2626 MetaType::Clear,
2627 MetaType::Indirect,
2628 MetaType::Offset,
2629 MetaType::Name("foo".to_string()),
2630 MetaType::Use("bar".to_string()),
2631 ];
2632
2633 for variant in cases {
2634 let json = serde_json::to_string(&variant).expect("serialize MetaType");
2635 let deserialized: MetaType = serde_json::from_str(&json).expect("deserialize MetaType");
2636 assert_eq!(variant, deserialized);
2637 }
2638 }
2639
2640 #[test]
2641 fn test_type_kind_meta_bit_width_is_none() {
2642 let cases = [
2643 MetaType::Default,
2644 MetaType::Clear,
2645 MetaType::Indirect,
2646 MetaType::Offset,
2647 MetaType::Name("x".to_string()),
2648 MetaType::Use("x".to_string()),
2649 ];
2650 for meta in cases {
2651 let kind = TypeKind::Meta(meta);
2652 assert_eq!(
2653 kind.bit_width(),
2654 None,
2655 "TypeKind::Meta must have no bit width: {kind:?}"
2656 );
2657 }
2658 }
2659}