1 | .\" GNU grep man page
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2 | .de dT
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3 | .ds Dt \\$2
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4 | ..
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5 | .dT Time-stamp: "2019-12-29"
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6 | .\" Update the above date whenever a change to either this file or
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7 | .\" grep.c's 'usage' function results in a nontrivial change to the man page.
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8 | .\" In Emacs, you can update the date by running 'M-x time-stamp'
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9 | .\" after you make a change that you decide is nontrivial.
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10 | .\" It is no big deal to forget to update the date.
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11 | .
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12 | .TH GREP 1 \*(Dt "GNU grep @VERSION@" "User Commands"
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13 | .
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14 | .if !\w|\*(lq| \{\
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15 | .\" groff an-old.tmac does not seem to be in use, so define lq and rq.
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16 | . ie \n(.g \{\
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17 | . ds lq \(lq\"
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18 | . ds rq \(rq\"
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19 | . \}
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20 | . el \{\
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21 | . ds lq ``
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22 | . ds rq ''
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23 | . \}
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24 | .\}
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25 | .
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26 | .if !\w|\*(la| \{\
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27 | .\" groff an-ext.tmac does not seem to be in use, so define the parts of
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28 | .\" it that are used below. For a copy of groff an-ext.tmac, please see:
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29 | .\" https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/groff.git/plain/tmac/an-ext.tmac
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30 | .\" --- Start of lines taken from groff an-ext.tmac
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31 | .
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32 | .\" Check whether we are using grohtml.
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33 | .nr mH 0
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34 | .if \n(.g \
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35 | . if '\*(.T'html' \
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36 | . nr mH 1
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37 | .
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38 | .
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39 | .\" Map mono-width fonts to standard fonts for groff's TTY device.
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40 | .if n \{\
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41 | . do ftr CR R
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42 | . do ftr CI I
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43 | . do ftr CB B
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44 | .\}
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45 | .
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46 | .\" groff has glyph entities for angle brackets.
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47 | .ie \n(.g \{\
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48 | . ds la \(la\"
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49 | . ds ra \(ra\"
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50 | .\}
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51 | .el \{\
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52 | . ds la <\"
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53 | . ds ra >\"
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54 | . \" groff's man macros control hyphenation with this register.
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55 | . nr HY 1
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56 | .\}
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57 | .
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58 | .\" Start URL.
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59 | .de UR
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60 | . ds m1 \\$1\"
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61 | . nh
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62 | . if \\n(mH \{\
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63 | . \" Start diversion in a new environment.
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64 | . do ev URL-div
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65 | . do di URL-div
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66 | . \}
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67 | ..
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68 | .
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69 | .
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70 | .\" End URL.
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71 | .de UE
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72 | . ie \\n(mH \{\
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73 | . br
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74 | . di
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75 | . ev
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76 | .
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77 | . \" Has there been one or more input lines for the link text?
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78 | . ie \\n(dn \{\
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79 | . do HTML-NS "<a href=""\\*(m1"">"
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80 | . \" Yes, strip off final newline of diversion and emit it.
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81 | . do chop URL-div
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82 | . do URL-div
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83 | \c
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84 | . do HTML-NS </a>
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85 | . \}
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86 | . el \
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87 | . do HTML-NS "<a href=""\\*(m1"">\\*(m1</a>"
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88 | \&\\$*\"
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89 | . \}
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90 | . el \
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91 | \\*(la\\*(m1\\*(ra\\$*\"
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92 | .
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93 | . hy \\n(HY
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94 | ..
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95 | .
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96 | .
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97 | .\" Start email address.
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98 | .de MT
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99 | . ds m1 \\$1\"
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100 | . nh
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101 | . if \\n(mH \{\
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102 | . \" Start diversion in a new environment.
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103 | . do ev URL-div
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104 | . do di URL-div
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105 | . \}
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106 | ..
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107 | .
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108 | .
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109 | .\" End email address.
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110 | .de ME
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111 | . ie \\n(mH \{\
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112 | . br
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113 | . di
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114 | . ev
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115 | .
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116 | . \" Has there been one or more input lines for the link text?
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117 | . ie \\n(dn \{\
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118 | . do HTML-NS "<a href=""mailto:\\*(m1"">"
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119 | . \" Yes, strip off final newline of diversion and emit it.
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120 | . do chop URL-div
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121 | . do URL-div
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122 | \c
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123 | . do HTML-NS </a>
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124 | . \}
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125 | . el \
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126 | . do HTML-NS "<a href=""mailto:\\*(m1"">\\*(m1</a>"
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127 | \&\\$*\"
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128 | . \}
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129 | . el \
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130 | \\*(la\\*(m1\\*(ra\\$*\"
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131 | .
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132 | . hy \\n(HY
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133 | ..
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134 | .\" --- End of lines taken from groff an-ext.tmac
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135 | .\}
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136 | .
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137 | .hy 0
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138 | .
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139 | .SH NAME
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140 | grep, egrep, fgrep \- print lines that match patterns
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141 | .
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142 | .SH SYNOPSIS
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143 | .B grep
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144 | .RI [ OPTION .\|.\|.]\&
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145 | .I PATTERNS
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146 | .RI [ FILE .\|.\|.]
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147 | .br
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148 | .B grep
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149 | .RI [ OPTION .\|.\|.]\&
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150 | .B \-e
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151 | .I PATTERNS
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152 | \&.\|.\|.\&
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153 | .RI [ FILE .\|.\|.]
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154 | .br
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155 | .B grep
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156 | .RI [ OPTION .\|.\|.]\&
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157 | .B \-f
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158 | .I PATTERN_FILE
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159 | \&.\|.\|.\&
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160 | .RI [ FILE .\|.\|.]
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161 | .
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162 | .SH DESCRIPTION
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163 | .B grep
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164 | searches for
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165 | .I PATTERNS
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166 | in each
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167 | .IR FILE .
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168 | .I PATTERNS
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169 | is one or more patterns separated by newline characters, and
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170 | .B grep
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171 | prints each line that matches a pattern.
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172 | Typically
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173 | .I PATTERNS
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174 | should be quoted when
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175 | .B grep
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176 | is used in a shell command.
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177 | .PP
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178 | A
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179 | .I FILE
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180 | of
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181 | .RB "\*(lq" \- "\*(rq"
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182 | stands for standard input.
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183 | If no
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184 | .I FILE
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185 | is given, recursive searches examine the working directory,
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186 | and nonrecursive searches read standard input.
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187 | .PP
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188 | In addition, the variant programs
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189 | .B egrep
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190 | and
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191 | .B fgrep
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192 | are the same as
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193 | .B "grep\ \-E"
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194 | and
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195 | .BR "grep\ \-F" ,
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196 | respectively.
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197 | These variants are deprecated, but are provided for backward compatibility.
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198 | .
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199 | .SH OPTIONS
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200 | .SS "Generic Program Information"
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201 | .TP
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202 | .B \-\^\-help
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203 | Output a usage message and exit.
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204 | .TP
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205 | .BR \-V ", " \-\^\-version
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206 | Output the version number of
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207 | .B grep
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208 | and exit.
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209 | .SS "Pattern Syntax"
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210 | .TP
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211 | .BR \-E ", " \-\^\-extended\-regexp
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212 | Interpret
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213 | .I PATTERNS
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214 | as extended regular expressions (EREs, see below).
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215 | .TP
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216 | .BR \-F ", " \-\^\-fixed\-strings
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217 | Interpret
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218 | .I PATTERNS
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219 | as fixed strings, not regular expressions.
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220 | .TP
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221 | .BR \-G ", " \-\^\-basic\-regexp
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222 | Interpret
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223 | .I PATTERNS
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224 | as basic regular expressions (BREs, see below).
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225 | This is the default.
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226 | .TP
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227 | .BR \-P ", " \-\^\-perl\-regexp
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228 | Interpret I<PATTERNS> as Perl-compatible regular expressions (PCREs).
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229 | This option is experimental when combined with the
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230 | .B \-z
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231 | .RB ( \-\^\-null\-data )
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232 | option, and
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233 | .B "grep \-P"
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234 | may warn of unimplemented features.
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235 | .SS "Matching Control"
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236 | .TP
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237 | .BI \-e " PATTERNS" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-regexp=" PATTERNS
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238 | Use
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239 | .I PATTERNS
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240 | as the patterns.
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241 | If this option is used multiple times or is combined with the
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242 | .B \-f
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243 | .RB ( \-\^\-file )
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244 | option, search for all patterns given.
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245 | This option can be used to protect a pattern beginning with \*(lq\-\*(rq.
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246 | .TP
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247 | .BI \-f " FILE" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-file=" FILE
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248 | Obtain patterns from
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249 | .IR FILE ,
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250 | one per line.
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251 | If this option is used multiple times or is combined with the
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252 | .B \-e
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253 | .RB ( \-\^\-regexp )
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254 | option, search for all patterns given.
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255 | The empty file contains zero patterns, and therefore matches nothing.
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256 | .TP
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257 | .BR \-i ", " \-\^\-ignore\-case
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258 | Ignore case distinctions in patterns and input data,
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259 | so that characters that differ only in case
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260 | match each other.
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261 | .TP
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262 | .B \-\^\-no\-ignore\-case
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263 | Do not ignore case distinctions in patterns and input data.
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264 | This is the default.
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265 | This option is useful for passing to shell scripts that already use
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266 | .BR \-i ,
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267 | to cancel its effects because the two options override each other.
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268 | .TP
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269 | .BR \-v ", " \-\^\-invert\-match
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270 | Invert the sense of matching, to select non-matching lines.
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271 | .TP
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272 | .BR \-w ", " \-\^\-word\-regexp
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273 | Select only those lines containing matches that form whole words.
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274 | The test is that the matching substring must either be at the
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275 | beginning of the line, or preceded by a non-word constituent
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276 | character.
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277 | Similarly, it must be either at the end of the line
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278 | or followed by a non-word constituent character.
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279 | Word-constituent characters are letters, digits, and the underscore.
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280 | This option has no effect if
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281 | .B \-x
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282 | is also specified.
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283 | .TP
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284 | .BR \-x ", " \-\^\-line\-regexp
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285 | Select only those matches that exactly match the whole line.
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286 | For a regular expression pattern, this is like parenthesizing the
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287 | pattern and then surrounding it with
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288 | .B ^
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289 | and
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290 | .BR $ .
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291 | .TP
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292 | .B \-y
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293 | Obsolete synonym for
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294 | .BR \-i .
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295 | .SS "General Output Control"
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296 | .TP
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297 | .BR \-c ", " \-\^\-count
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298 | Suppress normal output; instead print a count of
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299 | matching lines for each input file.
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300 | With the
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301 | .BR \-v ", " \-\^\-invert\-match
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302 | option (see below), count non-matching lines.
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303 | .TP
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304 | .BR \-\^\-color [ =\fIWHEN\fP "], " \-\^\-colour [ =\fIWHEN\fP ]
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305 | Surround the matched (non-empty) strings, matching lines, context lines,
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306 | file names, line numbers, byte offsets, and separators (for fields and
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307 | groups of context lines) with escape sequences to display them in color
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308 | on the terminal.
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309 | The colors are defined by the environment variable
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310 | .BR GREP_COLORS .
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311 | The deprecated environment variable
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312 | .B GREP_COLOR
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313 | is still supported, but its setting does not have priority.
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314 | .I WHEN
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315 | is
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316 | .BR never ", " always ", or " auto .
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317 | .TP
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318 | .BR \-L ", " \-\^\-files\-without\-match
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319 | Suppress normal output; instead print the name
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320 | of each input file from which no output would
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321 | normally have been printed.
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322 | .TP
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323 | .BR \-l ", " \-\^\-files\-with\-matches
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324 | Suppress normal output; instead print
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325 | the name of each input file from which output
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326 | would normally have been printed.
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327 | Scanning each input file stops upon first match.
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328 | .TP
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329 | .BI \-m " NUM" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-max\-count=" NUM
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330 | Stop reading a file after
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331 | .I NUM
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332 | matching lines.
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333 | If the input is standard input from a regular file,
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334 | and
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335 | .I NUM
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336 | matching lines are output,
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337 | .B grep
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338 | ensures that the standard input is positioned to just after the last
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339 | matching line before exiting, regardless of the presence of trailing
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340 | context lines.
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341 | This enables a calling process to resume a search.
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342 | When
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343 | .B grep
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344 | stops after
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345 | .I NUM
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346 | matching lines, it outputs any trailing context lines.
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347 | When the
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348 | .B \-c
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349 | or
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350 | .B \-\^\-count
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351 | option is also used,
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352 | .B grep
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353 | does not output a count greater than
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354 | .IR NUM .
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355 | When the
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356 | .B \-v
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357 | or
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358 | .B \-\^\-invert\-match
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359 | option is also used,
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360 | .B grep
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361 | stops after outputting
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362 | .I NUM
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363 | non-matching lines.
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364 | .TP
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365 | .BR \-o ", " \-\^\-only\-matching
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366 | Print only the matched (non-empty) parts of a matching line,
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367 | with each such part on a separate output line.
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368 | .TP
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369 | .BR \-q ", " \-\^\-quiet ", " \-\^\-silent
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370 | Quiet; do not write anything to standard output.
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371 | Exit immediately with zero status if any match is found,
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372 | even if an error was detected.
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373 | Also see the
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374 | .B \-s
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375 | or
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376 | .B \-\^\-no\-messages
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377 | option.
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378 | .TP
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379 | .BR \-s ", " \-\^\-no\-messages
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380 | Suppress error messages about nonexistent or unreadable files.
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381 | .SS "Output Line Prefix Control"
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382 | .TP
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383 | .BR \-b ", " \-\^\-byte\-offset
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384 | Print the 0-based byte offset within the input file
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385 | before each line of output.
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386 | If
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387 | .B \-o
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388 | .RB ( \-\^\-only\-matching )
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389 | is specified,
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390 | print the offset of the matching part itself.
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391 | .TP
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392 | .BR \-H ", " \-\^\-with\-filename
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393 | Print the file name for each match.
|
---|
394 | This is the default when there is more than one file to search.
|
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395 | This is a GNU extension.
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396 | .TP
|
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397 | .BR \-h ", " \-\^\-no\-filename
|
---|
398 | Suppress the prefixing of file names on output.
|
---|
399 | This is the default when there is only one file
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400 | (or only standard input) to search.
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401 | .TP
|
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402 | .BI \-\^\-label= LABEL
|
---|
403 | Display input actually coming from standard input as input coming from file
|
---|
404 | .IR LABEL .
|
---|
405 | This can be useful for commands that transform a file's contents
|
---|
406 | before searching,
|
---|
407 | e.g.,
|
---|
408 | .BR "gzip \-cd foo.gz | grep \-\^\-label=foo \-H 'some pattern'" .
|
---|
409 | See also the
|
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410 | .B \-H
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---|
411 | option.
|
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412 | .TP
|
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413 | .BR \-n ", " \-\^\-line\-number
|
---|
414 | Prefix each line of output with the 1-based line number
|
---|
415 | within its input file.
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416 | .TP
|
---|
417 | .BR \-T ", " \-\^\-initial\-tab
|
---|
418 | Make sure that the first character of actual line content lies on a
|
---|
419 | tab stop, so that the alignment of tabs looks normal.
|
---|
420 | This is useful with options that prefix their output to the actual content:
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---|
421 | .BR \-H , \-n ,
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422 | and
|
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423 | .BR \-b .
|
---|
424 | In order to improve the probability that lines
|
---|
425 | from a single file will all start at the same column,
|
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426 | this also causes the line number and byte offset (if present)
|
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427 | to be printed in a minimum size field width.
|
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428 | .TP
|
---|
429 | .BR \-Z ", " \-\^\-null
|
---|
430 | Output a zero byte (the ASCII
|
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431 | .B NUL
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---|
432 | character) instead of the character that normally follows a file name.
|
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433 | For example,
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434 | .B "grep \-lZ"
|
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435 | outputs a zero byte after each file name instead of the usual newline.
|
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436 | This option makes the output unambiguous, even in the presence of file
|
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437 | names containing unusual characters like newlines.
|
---|
438 | This option can be used with commands like
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439 | .BR "find \-print0" ,
|
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440 | .BR "perl \-0" ,
|
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441 | .BR "sort \-z" ,
|
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442 | and
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443 | .B "xargs \-0"
|
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444 | to process arbitrary file names,
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445 | even those that contain newline characters.
|
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446 | .SS "Context Line Control"
|
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447 | .TP
|
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448 | .BI \-A " NUM" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-after\-context=" NUM
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449 | Print
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450 | .I NUM
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451 | lines of trailing context after matching lines.
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452 | Places a line containing a group separator
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453 | .RB ( \-\^\- )
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454 | between contiguous groups of matches.
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455 | With the
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456 | .B \-o
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457 | or
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458 | .B \-\^\-only\-matching
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459 | option, this has no effect and a warning is given.
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460 | .TP
|
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461 | .BI \-B " NUM" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-before\-context=" NUM
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462 | Print
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463 | .I NUM
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464 | lines of leading context before matching lines.
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465 | Places a line containing a group separator
|
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466 | .RB ( \-\^\- )
|
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467 | between contiguous groups of matches.
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468 | With the
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469 | .B \-o
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470 | or
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471 | .B \-\^\-only\-matching
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472 | option, this has no effect and a warning is given.
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473 | .TP
|
---|
474 | .BI \-C " NUM" "\fR,\fP \-" NUM "\fR,\fP \-\^\-context=" NUM
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---|
475 | Print
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---|
476 | .I NUM
|
---|
477 | lines of output context.
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---|
478 | Places a line containing a group separator
|
---|
479 | .RB ( \-\^\- )
|
---|
480 | between contiguous groups of matches.
|
---|
481 | With the
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482 | .B \-o
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---|
483 | or
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484 | .B \-\^\-only\-matching
|
---|
485 | option, this has no effect and a warning is given.
|
---|
486 | .TP
|
---|
487 | .BI \-\^\-group\-separator= SEP
|
---|
488 | When
|
---|
489 | .BR \-A ,
|
---|
490 | .BR \-B ,
|
---|
491 | or
|
---|
492 | .B \-C
|
---|
493 | are in use, print
|
---|
494 | .I SEP
|
---|
495 | instead of
|
---|
496 | .B \-\^\-
|
---|
497 | between groups of lines.
|
---|
498 | .TP
|
---|
499 | .B \-\^\-no\-group\-separator
|
---|
500 | When
|
---|
501 | .BR \-A ,
|
---|
502 | .BR \-B ,
|
---|
503 | or
|
---|
504 | .B \-C
|
---|
505 | are in use, do not print a separator between groups of lines.
|
---|
506 | .SS "File and Directory Selection"
|
---|
507 | .TP
|
---|
508 | .BR \-a ", " \-\^\-text
|
---|
509 | Process a binary file as if it were text; this is equivalent to the
|
---|
510 | .B \-\^\-binary\-files=text
|
---|
511 | option.
|
---|
512 | .TP
|
---|
513 | .BI \-\^\-binary\-files= TYPE
|
---|
514 | If a file's data or metadata
|
---|
515 | indicate that the file contains binary data,
|
---|
516 | assume that the file is of type
|
---|
517 | .IR TYPE .
|
---|
518 | Non-text bytes indicate binary data; these are either output bytes that are
|
---|
519 | improperly encoded for the current locale, or null input bytes when the
|
---|
520 | .B \-z
|
---|
521 | option is not given.
|
---|
522 | .IP
|
---|
523 | By default,
|
---|
524 | .I TYPE
|
---|
525 | is
|
---|
526 | .BR binary ,
|
---|
527 | and
|
---|
528 | .B grep
|
---|
529 | suppresses output after null input binary data is discovered,
|
---|
530 | and suppresses output lines that contain improperly encoded data.
|
---|
531 | When some output is suppressed,
|
---|
532 | .B grep
|
---|
533 | follows any output
|
---|
534 | with a one-line message saying that a binary file matches.
|
---|
535 | .IP
|
---|
536 | If
|
---|
537 | .I TYPE
|
---|
538 | is
|
---|
539 | .BR without\-match ,
|
---|
540 | when
|
---|
541 | .B grep
|
---|
542 | discovers null input binary data it assumes that the rest of the file
|
---|
543 | does not match; this is equivalent to the
|
---|
544 | .B \-I
|
---|
545 | option.
|
---|
546 | .IP
|
---|
547 | If
|
---|
548 | .I TYPE
|
---|
549 | is
|
---|
550 | .BR text ,
|
---|
551 | .B grep
|
---|
552 | processes a binary file as if it were text; this is equivalent to the
|
---|
553 | .B \-a
|
---|
554 | option.
|
---|
555 | .IP
|
---|
556 | When
|
---|
557 | .I type
|
---|
558 | is
|
---|
559 | .BR binary ,
|
---|
560 | .B grep
|
---|
561 | may treat non-text bytes as line terminators even without the
|
---|
562 | .B \-z
|
---|
563 | option. This means choosing
|
---|
564 | .B binary
|
---|
565 | versus
|
---|
566 | .B text
|
---|
567 | can affect whether a pattern matches a file. For
|
---|
568 | example, when
|
---|
569 | .I type
|
---|
570 | is
|
---|
571 | .B binary
|
---|
572 | the pattern
|
---|
573 | .B q$ might
|
---|
574 | match
|
---|
575 | .B q
|
---|
576 | immediately followed by a null byte, even though this
|
---|
577 | is not matched when
|
---|
578 | .I type
|
---|
579 | is
|
---|
580 | .BR text .
|
---|
581 | Conversely, when
|
---|
582 | .I type
|
---|
583 | is
|
---|
584 | .B binary
|
---|
585 | the pattern
|
---|
586 | .B .\&
|
---|
587 | (period) might not match a null byte.
|
---|
588 | .IP
|
---|
589 | .I Warning:
|
---|
590 | The
|
---|
591 | .B \-a
|
---|
592 | option might output binary garbage,
|
---|
593 | which can have nasty side effects if the output is a terminal and if the
|
---|
594 | terminal driver interprets some of it as commands.
|
---|
595 | On the other hand, when reading files whose text encodings are
|
---|
596 | unknown, it can be helpful to use
|
---|
597 | .B \-a
|
---|
598 | or to set
|
---|
599 | .B LC_ALL='C'
|
---|
600 | in the environment, in order to find more matches even if the matches
|
---|
601 | are unsafe for direct display.
|
---|
602 | .TP
|
---|
603 | .BI \-D " ACTION" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-devices=" ACTION
|
---|
604 | If an input file is a device, FIFO or socket, use
|
---|
605 | .I ACTION
|
---|
606 | to process it.
|
---|
607 | By default,
|
---|
608 | .I ACTION
|
---|
609 | is
|
---|
610 | .BR read ,
|
---|
611 | which means that devices are read just as if they were ordinary files.
|
---|
612 | If
|
---|
613 | .I ACTION
|
---|
614 | is
|
---|
615 | .BR skip ,
|
---|
616 | devices are silently skipped.
|
---|
617 | .TP
|
---|
618 | .BI \-d " ACTION" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-directories=" ACTION
|
---|
619 | If an input file is a directory, use
|
---|
620 | .I ACTION
|
---|
621 | to process it.
|
---|
622 | By default,
|
---|
623 | .I ACTION
|
---|
624 | is
|
---|
625 | .BR read ,
|
---|
626 | i.e., read directories just as if they were ordinary files.
|
---|
627 | If
|
---|
628 | .I ACTION
|
---|
629 | is
|
---|
630 | .BR skip ,
|
---|
631 | silently skip directories.
|
---|
632 | If
|
---|
633 | .I ACTION
|
---|
634 | is
|
---|
635 | .BR recurse ,
|
---|
636 | read all files under each directory, recursively,
|
---|
637 | following symbolic links only if they are on the command line.
|
---|
638 | This is equivalent to the
|
---|
639 | .B \-r
|
---|
640 | option.
|
---|
641 | .TP
|
---|
642 | .BI \-\^\-exclude= GLOB
|
---|
643 | Skip any command-line file with a name suffix that matches the pattern
|
---|
644 | .IR GLOB ,
|
---|
645 | using wildcard matching; a name suffix is either the whole
|
---|
646 | name, or a trailing part that starts with a non-slash character
|
---|
647 | immediately after a slash
|
---|
648 | .RB ( / )
|
---|
649 | in the name.
|
---|
650 | When searching recursively, skip any subfile whose base name matches
|
---|
651 | .IR GLOB ;
|
---|
652 | the base name is the part after the last slash.
|
---|
653 | A pattern can use
|
---|
654 | .BR * ,
|
---|
655 | .BR ? ,
|
---|
656 | and
|
---|
657 | .BR [ .\|.\|. ]\&
|
---|
658 | as wildcards, and
|
---|
659 | .B \e
|
---|
660 | to quote a wildcard or backslash character literally.
|
---|
661 | .TP
|
---|
662 | .BI \-\^\-exclude\-from= FILE
|
---|
663 | Skip files whose base name matches any of the file-name globs read from
|
---|
664 | .I FILE
|
---|
665 | (using wildcard matching as described under
|
---|
666 | .BR \-\^\-exclude ).
|
---|
667 | .TP
|
---|
668 | .BI \-\^\-exclude\-dir= GLOB
|
---|
669 | Skip any command-line directory with a name suffix that matches the
|
---|
670 | pattern
|
---|
671 | .IR GLOB .
|
---|
672 | When searching recursively, skip any subdirectory
|
---|
673 | whose base name matches
|
---|
674 | .IR GLOB .
|
---|
675 | Ignore any redundant trailing slashes in
|
---|
676 | .IR GLOB .
|
---|
677 | .TP
|
---|
678 | .BR \-I
|
---|
679 | Process a binary file as if it did not contain matching data; this is
|
---|
680 | equivalent to the
|
---|
681 | .B \-\^\-binary\-files=without\-match
|
---|
682 | option.
|
---|
683 | .TP
|
---|
684 | .BI \-\^\-include= GLOB
|
---|
685 | Search only files whose base name matches
|
---|
686 | .I GLOB
|
---|
687 | (using wildcard matching as described under
|
---|
688 | .BR \-\^\-exclude ).
|
---|
689 | If contradictory
|
---|
690 | .B \-\^\-include
|
---|
691 | and
|
---|
692 | .B \-\^\-exclude
|
---|
693 | options are given, the last matching one wins.
|
---|
694 | If no
|
---|
695 | .B \-\^\-include
|
---|
696 | or
|
---|
697 | .B \-\^\-exclude
|
---|
698 | options match, a file is included unless the first such option is
|
---|
699 | .BR \-\^\-include .
|
---|
700 | .TP
|
---|
701 | .BR \-r ", " \-\^\-recursive
|
---|
702 | Read all files under each directory, recursively,
|
---|
703 | following symbolic links only if they are on the command line.
|
---|
704 | Note that if no file operand is given, B<grep> searches the working directory.
|
---|
705 | This is equivalent to the
|
---|
706 | .B "\-d recurse"
|
---|
707 | option.
|
---|
708 | .TP
|
---|
709 | .BR \-R ", " \-\^\-dereference\-recursive
|
---|
710 | Read all files under each directory, recursively.
|
---|
711 | Follow all symbolic links, unlike
|
---|
712 | .BR \-r .
|
---|
713 | .SS "Other Options"
|
---|
714 | .TP
|
---|
715 | .B \-\^\-line\-buffered
|
---|
716 | Use line buffering on output.
|
---|
717 | This can cause a performance penalty.
|
---|
718 | .TP
|
---|
719 | .BR \-U ", " \-\^\-binary
|
---|
720 | Treat the file(s) as binary.
|
---|
721 | By default, under MS-DOS and MS-Windows,
|
---|
722 | .BR grep
|
---|
723 | guesses whether a file is text or binary as described for the
|
---|
724 | .B \-\^\-binary\-files
|
---|
725 | option.
|
---|
726 | If
|
---|
727 | .BR grep
|
---|
728 | decides the file is a text file, it strips the CR characters from the
|
---|
729 | original file contents (to make regular expressions with
|
---|
730 | .B ^
|
---|
731 | and
|
---|
732 | .B $
|
---|
733 | work correctly).
|
---|
734 | Specifying
|
---|
735 | .B \-U
|
---|
736 | overrules this guesswork, causing all files to be read and passed to the
|
---|
737 | matching mechanism verbatim; if the file is a text file with CR/LF
|
---|
738 | pairs at the end of each line, this will cause some regular
|
---|
739 | expressions to fail.
|
---|
740 | This option has no effect on platforms
|
---|
741 | other than MS-DOS and MS-Windows.
|
---|
742 | .TP
|
---|
743 | .BR \-z ", " \-\^\-null\-data
|
---|
744 | Treat input and output data as sequences of lines, each terminated by
|
---|
745 | a zero byte (the ASCII NUL character) instead of a newline.
|
---|
746 | Like the
|
---|
747 | .B \-Z
|
---|
748 | or
|
---|
749 | .B \-\^\-null
|
---|
750 | option, this option can be used with commands like
|
---|
751 | .B sort -z
|
---|
752 | to process arbitrary file names.
|
---|
753 | .
|
---|
754 | .SH "REGULAR EXPRESSIONS"
|
---|
755 | A regular expression is a pattern that describes a set of strings.
|
---|
756 | Regular expressions are constructed analogously to arithmetic
|
---|
757 | expressions, by using various operators to combine smaller expressions.
|
---|
758 | .PP
|
---|
759 | .B grep
|
---|
760 | understands three different versions of regular expression syntax:
|
---|
761 | \*(lqbasic\*(rq (BRE), \*(lqextended\*(rq (ERE) and \*(lqperl\*(rq (PCRE).
|
---|
762 | In GNU
|
---|
763 | .B grep
|
---|
764 | there is no difference in available functionality between basic and
|
---|
765 | extended syntaxes.
|
---|
766 | In other implementations, basic regular expressions are less powerful.
|
---|
767 | The following description applies to extended regular expressions;
|
---|
768 | differences for basic regular expressions are summarized afterwards.
|
---|
769 | Perl-compatible regular expressions give additional functionality, and are
|
---|
770 | documented in B<pcresyntax>(3) and B<pcrepattern>(3), but work only if
|
---|
771 | PCRE support is enabled.
|
---|
772 | .PP
|
---|
773 | The fundamental building blocks are the regular expressions
|
---|
774 | that match a single character.
|
---|
775 | Most characters, including all letters and digits,
|
---|
776 | are regular expressions that match themselves.
|
---|
777 | Any meta-character with special meaning
|
---|
778 | may be quoted by preceding it with a backslash.
|
---|
779 | .PP
|
---|
780 | The period
|
---|
781 | .B .\&
|
---|
782 | matches any single character.
|
---|
783 | It is unspecified whether it matches an encoding error.
|
---|
784 | .SS "Character Classes and Bracket Expressions"
|
---|
785 | A
|
---|
786 | .I "bracket expression"
|
---|
787 | is a list of characters enclosed by
|
---|
788 | .B [
|
---|
789 | and
|
---|
790 | .BR ] .
|
---|
791 | It matches any single
|
---|
792 | character in that list.
|
---|
793 | If the first character of the list
|
---|
794 | is the caret
|
---|
795 | .B ^
|
---|
796 | then it matches any character
|
---|
797 | .I not
|
---|
798 | in the list; it is unspecified whether it matches an encoding error.
|
---|
799 | For example, the regular expression
|
---|
800 | .B [0123456789]
|
---|
801 | matches any single digit.
|
---|
802 | .PP
|
---|
803 | Within a bracket expression, a
|
---|
804 | .I "range expression"
|
---|
805 | consists of two characters separated by a hyphen.
|
---|
806 | It matches any single character that sorts between the two characters,
|
---|
807 | inclusive, using the locale's collating sequence and character set.
|
---|
808 | For example, in the default C locale,
|
---|
809 | .B [a\-d]
|
---|
810 | is equivalent to
|
---|
811 | .BR [abcd] .
|
---|
812 | Many locales sort characters in dictionary order, and in these locales
|
---|
813 | .B [a\-d]
|
---|
814 | is typically not equivalent to
|
---|
815 | .BR [abcd] ;
|
---|
816 | it might be equivalent to
|
---|
817 | .BR [aBbCcDd] ,
|
---|
818 | for example.
|
---|
819 | To obtain the traditional interpretation of bracket expressions,
|
---|
820 | you can use the C locale by setting the
|
---|
821 | .B LC_ALL
|
---|
822 | environment variable to the value
|
---|
823 | .BR C .
|
---|
824 | .PP
|
---|
825 | Finally, certain named classes of characters are predefined within
|
---|
826 | bracket expressions, as follows.
|
---|
827 | Their names are self explanatory, and they are
|
---|
828 | .BR [:alnum:] ,
|
---|
829 | .BR [:alpha:] ,
|
---|
830 | .BR [:blank:] ,
|
---|
831 | .BR [:cntrl:] ,
|
---|
832 | .BR [:digit:] ,
|
---|
833 | .BR [:graph:] ,
|
---|
834 | .BR [:lower:] ,
|
---|
835 | .BR [:print:] ,
|
---|
836 | .BR [:punct:] ,
|
---|
837 | .BR [:space:] ,
|
---|
838 | .BR [:upper:] ,
|
---|
839 | and
|
---|
840 | .BR [:xdigit:] .
|
---|
841 | For example,
|
---|
842 | .B [[:alnum:]]
|
---|
843 | means the character class of numbers and
|
---|
844 | letters in the current locale.
|
---|
845 | In the C locale and ASCII
|
---|
846 | character set encoding, this is the same as
|
---|
847 | .BR [0\-9A\-Za\-z] .
|
---|
848 | (Note that the brackets in these class names are part of the symbolic
|
---|
849 | names, and must be included in addition to the brackets delimiting
|
---|
850 | the bracket expression.)
|
---|
851 | Most meta-characters lose their special meaning inside bracket expressions.
|
---|
852 | To include a literal
|
---|
853 | .B ]
|
---|
854 | place it first in the list.
|
---|
855 | Similarly, to include a literal
|
---|
856 | .B ^
|
---|
857 | place it anywhere but first.
|
---|
858 | Finally, to include a literal
|
---|
859 | .B \-
|
---|
860 | place it last.
|
---|
861 | .SS Anchoring
|
---|
862 | The caret
|
---|
863 | .B ^
|
---|
864 | and the dollar sign
|
---|
865 | .B $
|
---|
866 | are meta-characters that respectively match the empty string at the
|
---|
867 | beginning and end of a line.
|
---|
868 | .SS "The Backslash Character and Special Expressions"
|
---|
869 | The symbols
|
---|
870 | .B \e<
|
---|
871 | and
|
---|
872 | .B \e>
|
---|
873 | respectively match the empty string at the beginning and end of a word.
|
---|
874 | The symbol
|
---|
875 | .B \eb
|
---|
876 | matches the empty string at the edge of a word,
|
---|
877 | and
|
---|
878 | .B \eB
|
---|
879 | matches the empty string provided it's
|
---|
880 | .I not
|
---|
881 | at the edge of a word.
|
---|
882 | The symbol
|
---|
883 | .B \ew
|
---|
884 | is a synonym for
|
---|
885 | .B [_[:alnum:]]
|
---|
886 | and
|
---|
887 | .B \eW
|
---|
888 | is a synonym for
|
---|
889 | .BR [^_[:alnum:]] .
|
---|
890 | .SS Repetition
|
---|
891 | A regular expression may be followed by one of several repetition operators:
|
---|
892 | .PD 0
|
---|
893 | .TP
|
---|
894 | .B ?
|
---|
895 | The preceding item is optional and matched at most once.
|
---|
896 | .TP
|
---|
897 | .B *
|
---|
898 | The preceding item will be matched zero or more times.
|
---|
899 | .TP
|
---|
900 | .B +
|
---|
901 | The preceding item will be matched one or more times.
|
---|
902 | .TP
|
---|
903 | .BI { n }
|
---|
904 | The preceding item is matched exactly
|
---|
905 | .I n
|
---|
906 | times.
|
---|
907 | .TP
|
---|
908 | .BI { n ,}
|
---|
909 | The preceding item is matched
|
---|
910 | .I n
|
---|
911 | or more times.
|
---|
912 | .TP
|
---|
913 | .BI {, m }
|
---|
914 | The preceding item is matched at most
|
---|
915 | .I m
|
---|
916 | times.
|
---|
917 | This is a GNU extension.
|
---|
918 | .TP
|
---|
919 | .BI { n , m }
|
---|
920 | The preceding item is matched at least
|
---|
921 | .I n
|
---|
922 | times, but not more than
|
---|
923 | .I m
|
---|
924 | times.
|
---|
925 | .PD
|
---|
926 | .SS Concatenation
|
---|
927 | Two regular expressions may be concatenated; the resulting
|
---|
928 | regular expression matches any string formed by concatenating
|
---|
929 | two substrings that respectively match the concatenated
|
---|
930 | expressions.
|
---|
931 | .SS Alternation
|
---|
932 | Two regular expressions may be joined by the infix operator
|
---|
933 | .BR | ;
|
---|
934 | the resulting regular expression matches any string matching
|
---|
935 | either alternate expression.
|
---|
936 | .SS Precedence
|
---|
937 | Repetition takes precedence over concatenation, which in turn
|
---|
938 | takes precedence over alternation.
|
---|
939 | A whole expression may be enclosed in parentheses
|
---|
940 | to override these precedence rules and form a subexpression.
|
---|
941 | .SS "Back-references and Subexpressions"
|
---|
942 | The back-reference
|
---|
943 | .BI \e n\c
|
---|
944 | \&, where
|
---|
945 | .I n
|
---|
946 | is a single digit, matches the substring
|
---|
947 | previously matched by the
|
---|
948 | .IR n th
|
---|
949 | parenthesized subexpression of the regular expression.
|
---|
950 | .SS "Basic vs Extended Regular Expressions"
|
---|
951 | In basic regular expressions the meta-characters
|
---|
952 | .BR ? ,
|
---|
953 | .BR + ,
|
---|
954 | .BR { ,
|
---|
955 | .BR | ,
|
---|
956 | .BR ( ,
|
---|
957 | and
|
---|
958 | .BR )
|
---|
959 | lose their special meaning; instead use the backslashed
|
---|
960 | versions
|
---|
961 | .BR \e? ,
|
---|
962 | .BR \e+ ,
|
---|
963 | .BR \e{ ,
|
---|
964 | .BR \e| ,
|
---|
965 | .BR \e( ,
|
---|
966 | and
|
---|
967 | .BR \e) .
|
---|
968 | .
|
---|
969 | .SH "EXIT STATUS"
|
---|
970 | Normally the exit status is 0 if a line is selected, 1 if no lines
|
---|
971 | were selected, and 2 if an error occurred. However, if the
|
---|
972 | .B \-q
|
---|
973 | or
|
---|
974 | .B \-\^\-quiet
|
---|
975 | or
|
---|
976 | .B \-\^\-silent
|
---|
977 | is used and a line is selected, the exit status is 0 even if an error
|
---|
978 | occurred.
|
---|
979 | .
|
---|
980 | .SH ENVIRONMENT
|
---|
981 | The behavior of
|
---|
982 | .B grep
|
---|
983 | is affected by the following environment variables.
|
---|
984 | .PP
|
---|
985 | The locale for category
|
---|
986 | .BI LC_ foo
|
---|
987 | is specified by examining the three environment variables
|
---|
988 | .BR LC_ALL ,
|
---|
989 | .BR LC_\fIfoo\fP ,
|
---|
990 | .BR LANG ,
|
---|
991 | in that order.
|
---|
992 | The first of these variables that is set specifies the locale.
|
---|
993 | For example, if
|
---|
994 | .B LC_ALL
|
---|
995 | is not set, but
|
---|
996 | .B LC_MESSAGES
|
---|
997 | is set to
|
---|
998 | .BR pt_BR ,
|
---|
999 | then the Brazilian Portuguese locale is used for the
|
---|
1000 | .B LC_MESSAGES
|
---|
1001 | category.
|
---|
1002 | The C locale is used if none of these environment variables are set,
|
---|
1003 | if the locale catalog is not installed, or if
|
---|
1004 | .B grep
|
---|
1005 | was not compiled with national language support (NLS).
|
---|
1006 | The shell command
|
---|
1007 | .B "locale \-a"
|
---|
1008 | lists locales that are currently available.
|
---|
1009 | .TP
|
---|
1010 | .B GREP_COLOR
|
---|
1011 | This variable specifies the color used to highlight matched (non-empty) text.
|
---|
1012 | It is deprecated in favor of
|
---|
1013 | .BR GREP_COLORS ,
|
---|
1014 | but still supported.
|
---|
1015 | The
|
---|
1016 | .BR mt ,
|
---|
1017 | .BR ms ,
|
---|
1018 | and
|
---|
1019 | .B mc
|
---|
1020 | capabilities of
|
---|
1021 | .B GREP_COLORS
|
---|
1022 | have priority over it.
|
---|
1023 | It can only specify the color used to highlight
|
---|
1024 | the matching non-empty text in any matching line
|
---|
1025 | (a selected line when the
|
---|
1026 | .B \-v
|
---|
1027 | command-line option is omitted,
|
---|
1028 | or a context line when
|
---|
1029 | .B \-v
|
---|
1030 | is specified).
|
---|
1031 | The default is
|
---|
1032 | .BR 01;31 ,
|
---|
1033 | which means a bold red foreground text on the terminal's default background.
|
---|
1034 | .TP
|
---|
1035 | .B GREP_COLORS
|
---|
1036 | Specifies the colors and other attributes
|
---|
1037 | used to highlight various parts of the output.
|
---|
1038 | Its value is a colon-separated list of capabilities
|
---|
1039 | that defaults to
|
---|
1040 | .B ms=01;31:mc=01;31:sl=:cx=:fn=35:ln=32:bn=32:se=36
|
---|
1041 | with the
|
---|
1042 | .B rv
|
---|
1043 | and
|
---|
1044 | .B ne
|
---|
1045 | boolean capabilities omitted (i.e., false).
|
---|
1046 | Supported capabilities are as follows.
|
---|
1047 | .RS
|
---|
1048 | .TP
|
---|
1049 | .B sl=
|
---|
1050 | SGR substring for whole selected lines
|
---|
1051 | (i.e.,
|
---|
1052 | matching lines when the
|
---|
1053 | .B \-v
|
---|
1054 | command-line option is omitted,
|
---|
1055 | or non-matching lines when
|
---|
1056 | .B \-v
|
---|
1057 | is specified).
|
---|
1058 | If however the boolean
|
---|
1059 | .B rv
|
---|
1060 | capability
|
---|
1061 | and the
|
---|
1062 | .B \-v
|
---|
1063 | command-line option are both specified,
|
---|
1064 | it applies to context matching lines instead.
|
---|
1065 | The default is empty (i.e., the terminal's default color pair).
|
---|
1066 | .TP
|
---|
1067 | .B cx=
|
---|
1068 | SGR substring for whole context lines
|
---|
1069 | (i.e.,
|
---|
1070 | non-matching lines when the
|
---|
1071 | .B \-v
|
---|
1072 | command-line option is omitted,
|
---|
1073 | or matching lines when
|
---|
1074 | .B \-v
|
---|
1075 | is specified).
|
---|
1076 | If however the boolean
|
---|
1077 | .B rv
|
---|
1078 | capability
|
---|
1079 | and the
|
---|
1080 | .B \-v
|
---|
1081 | command-line option are both specified,
|
---|
1082 | it applies to selected non-matching lines instead.
|
---|
1083 | The default is empty (i.e., the terminal's default color pair).
|
---|
1084 | .TP
|
---|
1085 | .B rv
|
---|
1086 | Boolean value that reverses (swaps) the meanings of
|
---|
1087 | the
|
---|
1088 | .B sl=
|
---|
1089 | and
|
---|
1090 | .B cx=
|
---|
1091 | capabilities
|
---|
1092 | when the
|
---|
1093 | .B \-v
|
---|
1094 | command-line option is specified.
|
---|
1095 | The default is false (i.e., the capability is omitted).
|
---|
1096 | .TP
|
---|
1097 | .B mt=01;31
|
---|
1098 | SGR substring for matching non-empty text in any matching line
|
---|
1099 | (i.e.,
|
---|
1100 | a selected line when the
|
---|
1101 | .B \-v
|
---|
1102 | command-line option is omitted,
|
---|
1103 | or a context line when
|
---|
1104 | .B \-v
|
---|
1105 | is specified).
|
---|
1106 | Setting this is equivalent to setting both
|
---|
1107 | .B ms=
|
---|
1108 | and
|
---|
1109 | .B mc=
|
---|
1110 | at once to the same value.
|
---|
1111 | The default is a bold red text foreground over the current line background.
|
---|
1112 | .TP
|
---|
1113 | .B ms=01;31
|
---|
1114 | SGR substring for matching non-empty text in a selected line.
|
---|
1115 | (This is only used when the
|
---|
1116 | .B \-v
|
---|
1117 | command-line option is omitted.)
|
---|
1118 | The effect of the
|
---|
1119 | .B sl=
|
---|
1120 | (or
|
---|
1121 | .B cx=
|
---|
1122 | if
|
---|
1123 | .BR rv )
|
---|
1124 | capability remains active when this kicks in.
|
---|
1125 | The default is a bold red text foreground over the current line background.
|
---|
1126 | .TP
|
---|
1127 | .B mc=01;31
|
---|
1128 | SGR substring for matching non-empty text in a context line.
|
---|
1129 | (This is only used when the
|
---|
1130 | .B \-v
|
---|
1131 | command-line option is specified.)
|
---|
1132 | The effect of the
|
---|
1133 | .B cx=
|
---|
1134 | (or
|
---|
1135 | .B sl=
|
---|
1136 | if
|
---|
1137 | .BR rv )
|
---|
1138 | capability remains active when this kicks in.
|
---|
1139 | The default is a bold red text foreground over the current line background.
|
---|
1140 | .TP
|
---|
1141 | .B fn=35
|
---|
1142 | SGR substring for file names prefixing any content line.
|
---|
1143 | The default is a magenta text foreground over the terminal's default background.
|
---|
1144 | .TP
|
---|
1145 | .B ln=32
|
---|
1146 | SGR substring for line numbers prefixing any content line.
|
---|
1147 | The default is a green text foreground over the terminal's default background.
|
---|
1148 | .TP
|
---|
1149 | .B bn=32
|
---|
1150 | SGR substring for byte offsets prefixing any content line.
|
---|
1151 | The default is a green text foreground over the terminal's default background.
|
---|
1152 | .TP
|
---|
1153 | .B se=36
|
---|
1154 | SGR substring for separators that are inserted
|
---|
1155 | between selected line fields
|
---|
1156 | .RB ( : ),
|
---|
1157 | between context line fields,
|
---|
1158 | .RB ( \- ),
|
---|
1159 | and between groups of adjacent lines when nonzero context is specified
|
---|
1160 | .RB ( \-\^\- ).
|
---|
1161 | The default is a cyan text foreground over the terminal's default background.
|
---|
1162 | .TP
|
---|
1163 | .B ne
|
---|
1164 | Boolean value that prevents clearing to the end of line
|
---|
1165 | using Erase in Line (EL) to Right
|
---|
1166 | .RB ( \e33[K )
|
---|
1167 | each time a colorized item ends.
|
---|
1168 | This is needed on terminals on which EL is not supported.
|
---|
1169 | It is otherwise useful on terminals
|
---|
1170 | for which the
|
---|
1171 | .B back_color_erase
|
---|
1172 | .RB ( bce )
|
---|
1173 | boolean terminfo capability does not apply,
|
---|
1174 | when the chosen highlight colors do not affect the background,
|
---|
1175 | or when EL is too slow or causes too much flicker.
|
---|
1176 | The default is false (i.e., the capability is omitted).
|
---|
1177 | .PP
|
---|
1178 | Note that boolean capabilities have no
|
---|
1179 | .BR = .\|.\|.\&
|
---|
1180 | part.
|
---|
1181 | They are omitted (i.e., false) by default and become true when specified.
|
---|
1182 | .PP
|
---|
1183 | See the Select Graphic Rendition (SGR) section
|
---|
1184 | in the documentation of the text terminal that is used
|
---|
1185 | for permitted values and their meaning as character attributes.
|
---|
1186 | These substring values are integers in decimal representation
|
---|
1187 | and can be concatenated with semicolons.
|
---|
1188 | .B grep
|
---|
1189 | takes care of assembling the result
|
---|
1190 | into a complete SGR sequence
|
---|
1191 | .RB ( \e33[ .\|.\|. m ).
|
---|
1192 | Common values to concatenate include
|
---|
1193 | .B 1
|
---|
1194 | for bold,
|
---|
1195 | .B 4
|
---|
1196 | for underline,
|
---|
1197 | .B 5
|
---|
1198 | for blink,
|
---|
1199 | .B 7
|
---|
1200 | for inverse,
|
---|
1201 | .B 39
|
---|
1202 | for default foreground color,
|
---|
1203 | .B 30
|
---|
1204 | to
|
---|
1205 | .B 37
|
---|
1206 | for foreground colors,
|
---|
1207 | .B 90
|
---|
1208 | to
|
---|
1209 | .B 97
|
---|
1210 | for 16-color mode foreground colors,
|
---|
1211 | .B 38;5;0
|
---|
1212 | to
|
---|
1213 | .B 38;5;255
|
---|
1214 | for 88-color and 256-color modes foreground colors,
|
---|
1215 | .B 49
|
---|
1216 | for default background color,
|
---|
1217 | .B 40
|
---|
1218 | to
|
---|
1219 | .B 47
|
---|
1220 | for background colors,
|
---|
1221 | .B 100
|
---|
1222 | to
|
---|
1223 | .B 107
|
---|
1224 | for 16-color mode background colors, and
|
---|
1225 | .B 48;5;0
|
---|
1226 | to
|
---|
1227 | .B 48;5;255
|
---|
1228 | for 88-color and 256-color modes background colors.
|
---|
1229 | .RE
|
---|
1230 | .TP
|
---|
1231 | \fBLC_ALL\fP, \fBLC_COLLATE\fP, \fBLANG\fP
|
---|
1232 | These variables specify the locale for the
|
---|
1233 | .B LC_COLLATE
|
---|
1234 | category,
|
---|
1235 | which determines the collating sequence
|
---|
1236 | used to interpret range expressions like
|
---|
1237 | .BR [a\-z] .
|
---|
1238 | .TP
|
---|
1239 | \fBLC_ALL\fP, \fBLC_CTYPE\fP, \fBLANG\fP
|
---|
1240 | These variables specify the locale for the
|
---|
1241 | .B LC_CTYPE
|
---|
1242 | category,
|
---|
1243 | which determines the type of characters,
|
---|
1244 | e.g., which characters are whitespace.
|
---|
1245 | This category also determines the character encoding, that is, whether
|
---|
1246 | text is encoded in UTF-8, ASCII, or some other encoding. In the C or
|
---|
1247 | POSIX locale, all characters are encoded as a single byte and every
|
---|
1248 | byte is a valid character.
|
---|
1249 | .TP
|
---|
1250 | \fBLC_ALL\fP, \fBLC_MESSAGES\fP, \fBLANG\fP
|
---|
1251 | These variables specify the locale for the
|
---|
1252 | .B LC_MESSAGES
|
---|
1253 | category,
|
---|
1254 | which determines the language that
|
---|
1255 | .B grep
|
---|
1256 | uses for messages.
|
---|
1257 | The default C locale uses American English messages.
|
---|
1258 | .TP
|
---|
1259 | .B POSIXLY_CORRECT
|
---|
1260 | If set,
|
---|
1261 | .B grep
|
---|
1262 | behaves as POSIX requires; otherwise,
|
---|
1263 | .B grep
|
---|
1264 | behaves more like other GNU programs.
|
---|
1265 | POSIX requires that options that follow file names must be
|
---|
1266 | treated as file names; by default, such options are permuted to the
|
---|
1267 | front of the operand list and are treated as options.
|
---|
1268 | Also, POSIX requires that unrecognized options be diagnosed as
|
---|
1269 | \*(lqillegal\*(rq, but since they are not really against the law the default
|
---|
1270 | is to diagnose them as \*(lqinvalid\*(rq.
|
---|
1271 | .B POSIXLY_CORRECT
|
---|
1272 | also disables \fB_\fP\fIN\fP\fB_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_\fP,
|
---|
1273 | described below.
|
---|
1274 | .TP
|
---|
1275 | \fB_\fP\fIN\fP\fB_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_\fP
|
---|
1276 | (Here
|
---|
1277 | .I N
|
---|
1278 | is
|
---|
1279 | .BR grep 's
|
---|
1280 | numeric process ID.) If the
|
---|
1281 | .IR i th
|
---|
1282 | character of this environment variable's value is
|
---|
1283 | .BR 1 ,
|
---|
1284 | do not consider the
|
---|
1285 | .IR i th
|
---|
1286 | operand of
|
---|
1287 | .B grep
|
---|
1288 | to be an option, even if it appears to be one.
|
---|
1289 | A shell can put this variable in the environment for each command it runs,
|
---|
1290 | specifying which operands are the results of file name wildcard
|
---|
1291 | expansion and therefore should not be treated as options.
|
---|
1292 | This behavior is available only with the GNU C library, and only
|
---|
1293 | when
|
---|
1294 | .B POSIXLY_CORRECT
|
---|
1295 | is not set.
|
---|
1296 | .
|
---|
1297 | .SH NOTES
|
---|
1298 | This man page is maintained only fitfully;
|
---|
1299 | the full documentation is often more up-to-date.
|
---|
1300 | .
|
---|
1301 | .SH COPYRIGHT
|
---|
1302 | Copyright 1998-2000, 2002, 2005-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
|
---|
1303 | .PP
|
---|
1304 | This is free software;
|
---|
1305 | see the source for copying conditions.
|
---|
1306 | There is NO warranty;
|
---|
1307 | not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
|
---|
1308 | .
|
---|
1309 | .SH BUGS
|
---|
1310 | .SS "Reporting Bugs"
|
---|
1311 | Email bug reports to
|
---|
1312 | .MT [email protected]
|
---|
1313 | the bug-reporting address
|
---|
1314 | .ME .
|
---|
1315 | An
|
---|
1316 | .UR https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-grep
|
---|
1317 | email archive
|
---|
1318 | .UE
|
---|
1319 | and a
|
---|
1320 | .UR https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/pkgreport.cgi?package=grep
|
---|
1321 | bug tracker
|
---|
1322 | .UE
|
---|
1323 | are available.
|
---|
1324 | .SS "Known Bugs"
|
---|
1325 | Large repetition counts in the
|
---|
1326 | .BI { n , m }
|
---|
1327 | construct may cause
|
---|
1328 | .B grep
|
---|
1329 | to use lots of memory.
|
---|
1330 | In addition,
|
---|
1331 | certain other obscure regular expressions require exponential time
|
---|
1332 | and space, and may cause
|
---|
1333 | .B grep
|
---|
1334 | to run out of memory.
|
---|
1335 | .PP
|
---|
1336 | Back-references are very slow, and may require exponential time.
|
---|
1337 | .
|
---|
1338 | .SH EXAMPLE
|
---|
1339 | The following example outputs the location and contents of any line
|
---|
1340 | containing \*(lqf\*(rq and ending in \*(lq.c\*(rq,
|
---|
1341 | within all files in the current directory whose names
|
---|
1342 | contain \*(lqg\*(rq and end in \*(lq.h\*(rq.
|
---|
1343 | The
|
---|
1344 | .B \-n
|
---|
1345 | option outputs line numbers, the
|
---|
1346 | .B \-\-
|
---|
1347 | argument treats expansions of \*(lq*g*.h\*(rq starting with \*(lq\-\*(rq
|
---|
1348 | as file names not options,
|
---|
1349 | and the empty file /dev/null causes file names to be output
|
---|
1350 | even if only one file name happens to be of the form \*(lq*g*.h\*(rq.
|
---|
1351 | .PP
|
---|
1352 | .in +2n
|
---|
1353 | .EX
|
---|
1354 | $ \fBgrep\fP \-n \-\- 'f.*\e.c$' *g*.h /dev/null
|
---|
1355 | argmatch.h:1:/* definitions and prototypes for argmatch.c
|
---|
1356 | .EE
|
---|
1357 | .in
|
---|
1358 | .PP
|
---|
1359 | The only line that matches is line 1 of argmatch.h.
|
---|
1360 | Note that the regular expression syntax used in the pattern differs
|
---|
1361 | from the globbing syntax that the shell uses to match file names.
|
---|
1362 | .
|
---|
1363 | .SH "SEE ALSO"
|
---|
1364 | .SS "Regular Manual Pages"
|
---|
1365 | .BR awk (1),
|
---|
1366 | .BR cmp (1),
|
---|
1367 | .BR diff (1),
|
---|
1368 | .BR find (1),
|
---|
1369 | .BR perl (1),
|
---|
1370 | .BR sed (1),
|
---|
1371 | .BR sort (1),
|
---|
1372 | .BR xargs (1),
|
---|
1373 | .BR read (2),
|
---|
1374 | .BR pcre (3),
|
---|
1375 | .BR pcresyntax (3),
|
---|
1376 | .BR pcrepattern (3),
|
---|
1377 | .BR terminfo (5),
|
---|
1378 | .BR glob (7),
|
---|
1379 | .BR regex (7)
|
---|
1380 | .SS "Full Documentation"
|
---|
1381 | A
|
---|
1382 | .UR https://www.gnu.org/software/grep/manual/
|
---|
1383 | complete manual
|
---|
1384 | .UE
|
---|
1385 | is available.
|
---|
1386 | If the
|
---|
1387 | .B info
|
---|
1388 | and
|
---|
1389 | .B grep
|
---|
1390 | programs are properly installed at your site, the command
|
---|
1391 | .IP
|
---|
1392 | .B info grep
|
---|
1393 | .PP
|
---|
1394 | should give you access to the complete manual.
|
---|
1395 | .
|
---|
1396 | .\" Work around problems with some troff -man implementations.
|
---|
1397 | .br
|
---|
1398 | .
|
---|
1399 | .\" Format for Emacs-maintained Dt string defined at this file's start.
|
---|
1400 | .\" Local variables:
|
---|
1401 | .\" time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d"
|
---|
1402 | .\" End:
|
---|