-w and -v flag matching was mostly functional but had some minor problems: 1. -w flag processing only allowed one iteration through pattern matching on a line. This was problematic if one pattern could match more than once, or if there were multiple patterns and the earliest/ longest match was not the most ideal, and 2. Previous work "fixed" things to not further process a line if the first iteration through patterns produced no matches. This is clearly wrong if we're dealing with the more restrictive -w matching. #2 breakage could have also occurred before recent broad rewrites, but it would be more arbitrary based on input patterns as to whether or not it actually affected things. Fix both of these by forcing a retry of the patterns after advancing just past the start of the first match if we're doing more restrictive -w matching and we didn't get any hits to start with. Also move -v flag processing outside of the loop so that we have a greater change to match in the more restrictive cases. This wasn't strictly wrong, but it could be a little more error prone. While here, introduce some regressions tests for this behavior and fix some excessive wrapping nearby that hindered readability. GNU grep passes these new tests. PR: 218467, 218811 Submitted by: Kyle Evans <kevans91 at ksu.edu> Reviewed by: cem, ngie Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D10329
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