: Syntax for Regular Expression Data Patterns
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Syntax for Regular Expression Data Patterns

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Syntax for Regular Expression Data Patterns

The general pattern requirements and syntax for creating data patterns depends on the pattern-matching engine that you enable: classic or enhanced (default).
Pattern Requirements
Classic
Enhanced
Pattern length
Requires 7 literal characters, which cannot include a period (
.
), an asterisk (
*
), a plus sign (
+
), or a range (
[a-z]
).
Requires two literal characters.
Case-insensitivity
Requires you to define patterns for all possible strings to match all variations of a term.
Example: To match any documents designated as confidential, you must create a pattern that includes “confidential,” “Confidential,” and “CONFIDENTIAL.”
Allows you to use the
i
option on a sub-pattern.
Example:
((?i)\bconfidential\b)
matches
ConfiDential
The regular expression syntax in PAN-OS
®
is similar to traditional regular expression engines but every engine is unique. The Classic Syntax and Enhanced Syntax tables describe the syntax supported in the PAN-OS pattern-matching engines.
Classic Syntax
Pattern Syntax
Description
.
Match any single character.
?
Match the preceding character or expression 0 or one time. You must include the general expression inside parentheses.
Example:
(abc)?
*
Match the preceding character or expression 0 or more times. You must include the general expression inside parentheses.
Example:
(abc)*
+
Match the preceding character or regular expression one or more times. You must include the general expression inside parentheses.
Example:
(abc)+
|
Specify one “OR” another.
You must include alternative substrings in parentheses.
Example:
((bif)|(scr)|(exe))
matches
bif
,
scr
, or
exe
.
-
Specify a range.
Example:
[c-z]
matches any character between
c
and
z
inclusive.
[ ]
Match any specified character.
Example:
[abz]
matches any of the specified characters—
a
,
b
, or
z
.
^
Match any character except those specified.
Example:
[^abz]
matches any character except the specified characters—
a
,
b
, or
z
.
{ }
Match a string that contains minimum and maximum.
Example:
{10-20}
matches any string that is between 10 and 20 bytes inclusive. You must specify this directly in front of a fixed string and you can use only a hyphen (
-
).
\
Perform a literal match on any character. You must precede the specified character with a backslash (
\
).
&amp
The ampersand (
&
) is a special character so, to look for
&
in a string, you must use
&amp
.
Enhanced Syntax
The enhanced pattern-matching engine supports all of the Classic Syntax as well as the following syntax:
Pattern Syntax
Description
Shorthand character classes
Symbols that stand for a character of a specific type, such as a digit or white space. You can negate any of these shorthand character classes by using uppercase characters.
\s
Match any whitespace character.
Example:
\s
matches a space, tab, line break, or form feed.
\d
Match a character that is a digit [0-9].
Example:
\d
matches
0
.
\w
Matches an ASCII character [A-Za-z0-9_].
Example:
\w\w\w
matches
PAN
.
\v
Match a vertical white space character, which includes all unicode line break characters.
Example:
\v
matches a vertical white space character.
\h
Match horizontal white space, which includes the tab and all of the “space separator” unicode characters.
Example:
\h
matches a horizontal white space character.
Bounded repeat quantifiers
Specify how many times to repeat the previous item.
{n}
Match exactly a number (
n
) of times.
Example:
a{2}
matches
aa
.
{n,m}
{n,m}
matches from
n
to
m
times.
Example:
a{2,4}
matches
aa
,
aaa
, and
aaaa
{n, }
{n,}
matches at least
n
times.
Example:
a{2,}
matches
aaaaa
in
aaaaab
.
Anchor characters
Specify where to match an expression.
^
Match at the beginning of a string. Also matches after every line break when multi-line mode (
m
) is enabled.
Example: Given the string
abc
,
^a
matches
a
, but
^b
doesn’t match anything because
b
doesn’t occur at the start of the string.
$
Match at the end of a string or before a newline character at the end of a string. Also matches before every line break when multi-line mode (
m
) is enabled.
Example: Given the string
abc
,
c$
matches
c
, but
a$
doesn’t match anything because
a
doesn’t occur at the end of the string.
\A
Match at the beginning of a string. Doesn’t match after line breaks, even when multi-line mode (
m
) is enabled.
\Z
Match at the end of a string and before the final line break. Doesn’t match before other line breaks even when multi-line mode (
m
) is enabled.
\z
Match at the absolute end of a string. Doesn’t match before line breaks.
Option modifiers
Change the behavior of a sub-pattern. Enter
(?<option>)
to enable or
(?-<option>)
to disable.
i
Enable case-insensitivity.
Example:
((?i)\bconfidential\b)
matches
ConfiDential
.
m
Make
^
and
$
match at the beginning and end of lines.
s
Make
.
match anything, including line break characters.
x
Ignore whitespace between regex tokens.

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