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The postmortem for the recent Stack Overflow outage implicates a backtracking implementation of regular expression matching in the outage.

O(N) implementations of regex matching that don't require backtracking exist -- see Russ Cox's paper Regular Expression Matching Can Be Simple And Fast for more background. The RE2 library for example is open source, and it seems like it should be possible to use from the Stack Overflow stack, although it is written in C++.

Are there technical reasons why Stack Overflow uses a backtracking regex library, or is it simply a case of using the simplest thing that worked since it never was a problem before? I'm surprised that switching to a different regex implementation (or even a custom non-regex DFA sanitizer) isn't one of the follow-up actions listed in the postmortem.

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    Wild guess: Stack Overflow is built on .NET. .NET's regex implementation is backtracking. You generally don't start replacing major components of your standard library just for the hell of it; you wait for necessity.
    – Shog9
    Jul 20, 2016 at 21:02
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    @HansPassant - Heh, nice find. Very telling that it would contain Atwood remarking that "When I throw a regex together, I never worry about performance". Whoops! :)
    – Travis J
    Jul 20, 2016 at 21:06
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    @Shog9: Sure, that would make sense initially. But now that the necessity (or, at very least, the danger) has been demonstrated, why not consider an alternative that is guaranteed not to have this behavior? My real question is: why isn't "switch to a different regex engine" one of the action items that came out of the postmortem? Jul 20, 2016 at 21:26
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    @Shog9 Looks like it supports nonbacktracking subexpressions
    – user3717023
    Jul 20, 2016 at 21:34
  • @Shog9 .NET doesn't have possessive quantifiers, but you could have used an atomic group to prevent backtracking. See this question
    – 4castle
    Jul 20, 2016 at 23:32
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    There's no need to replace the entire regex engine when you can just write a regex that doesn't cause catastrophic backtracking. I'm not sure about .NET, but at least in Perl, the problem can be solved by splitting the regex into two separate ones, e.g. ^\s+|\s+$ becomes ^\s+ and \s+$. Jul 20, 2016 at 23:54
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    @ThisSuitIsBlackNot: My team's perspective (which admittedly is not everyone's) is that if there's a way to use an API incorrectly, people will end up using it incorrectly. Even the best developers make mistakes. I'm a big fan of flagging suspect uses of APIs using static analysis, but sometimes it's better to just switch to a different API that is guaranteed to be used correctly. Jul 21, 2016 at 0:29
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    To prevent catastrophic backtracking in .NET 4.5 you can specify a Timeout property. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…
    – granth
    Jul 21, 2016 at 1:56
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    direct cause was a malformed post that caused one of our regular expressions to consume high CPU on our web servers I'd like to see how you guys diagnosed it back to a Post with the RegEx ^[\s\u200c]+|[\s\u200c]+$ > Some people, when confronted with a problem, think “I know, I'll use regular expressions.” Now they have two problems. Jul 21, 2016 at 4:22
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    @JeremyThompson especially interested in how they did it in 10 minutes.
    – Hailwood
    Jul 21, 2016 at 4:48
  • Are there privacy reasons why the malformed post isn't identified? Jul 21, 2016 at 4:56
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    They kind of did identify it: stackoverflow.com/questions/38484433/…
    – Marcel
    Jul 21, 2016 at 5:44
  • @ThisSuitIsBlackNot: In .NET, the problem can be resolved by splitting the regex, but we will use RightToLeft mode when trimming spaces from the end. I don't know for sure, but I doubt .NET has the same optimization as Perl in such case.
    – nhahtdh
    Jul 21, 2016 at 8:04
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    @JeremyThompson Quick answer: Memory dump got us to the Regex and front page. Front page is an algorithm applied to the newest 3000 posts. While one person fixed the regex, another ran the regex against those to last 3000 since they don't change when no one can post. Found the post that took the longest to run. Problem found and fixed.
    – Zypher
    Jul 21, 2016 at 14:44

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