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author | obrien <obrien@FreeBSD.org> | 2000-01-03 21:09:05 +0000 |
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committer | obrien <obrien@FreeBSD.org> | 2000-01-03 21:09:05 +0000 |
commit | adcf442656b4f6fbd6d46e954a2269ab3da0fdc8 (patch) | |
tree | de520cd79619813c1f1d7c838e185a8135adbd1a /gnu | |
parent | 8f037d36520efb752b0593ea6707c3f4a1d5b33b (diff) | |
parent | d8d7d228e475566fe145acde42c3569c522cd98c (diff) | |
download | FreeBSD-src-adcf442656b4f6fbd6d46e954a2269ab3da0fdc8.zip FreeBSD-src-adcf442656b4f6fbd6d46e954a2269ab3da0fdc8.tar.gz |
This commit was generated by cvs2svn to compensate for changes in r55360,
which included commits to RCS files with non-trunk default branches.
Diffstat (limited to 'gnu')
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/ChangeLog | 406 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/NEWS | 52 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/THANKS | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/config.hin | 22 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/grep.texi | 607 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/version.texi | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/system.h | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.awk | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.tests | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.awk | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.tests | 24 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/spencer1.awk | 4 |
12 files changed, 964 insertions, 189 deletions
diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/ChangeLog b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/ChangeLog index 9996fe5..3855810 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/ChangeLog +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,409 @@ +1999-11-18 Paul Eggert + + * m4/largefile.m4 (AC_SYS_LARGEFILE_FLAGS): Work around a + problem with the QNX 4.25 shell, which doesn't propagate exit + status of failed commands inside shell assignments. + +1999-11-13 Eli Zaretskii + + * doc/grep.texi: Minor markup and spelling corrections. Use + @noindent where appropriate. + + * PATCHES-{AM,AC}: rename to PATCHES.{AM,AC} + +1999-11-12 Eli Zaretskii + + doc/grep.texi: Minor fixes and typos corrected. + djgpp/README: Updated version. + +1999-11-07 Paul Eggert + + * src/grep.c (usage): Fix misspelling. + +1999-11-07 Paul Eggert + + Don't assume that the C library has re_set_syntax and friends. + * src/Makefile.am (base_sources): Add regex.c, regex.h. + (EXTRA_DIST): Remove regex.c, regex.h. + + * src/grep.c (prtext): Use out_quiet, not not_text, to decide + whether to set pending to zero at the end. + (not_text): Remove static variable, undoing latest change. + (grep): Likewise. + + * doc/grep.texi: Tighten up the text, and fix some minor + spelling and usage errors. Use @enumerate rather than @table + @samp, since it's better for Q&A format. Add cross + references. + +1999-11-01 Alain Magloire + + * src/search.c: Use the more portable [[:alnum:]] + to define a word instead of Ascii dependent [0-9A-Za-z] + * src/grep.c: make not_text global to not display text when + the context switches -A/-B/-C are use on binary files. + * make grep-2.3g available for testing. + * configure.in: drop support for --without-included-regex. + This was generating bogus bug reports, since many GNU/Linux + users have different version of glibc. And glibc maintainers + decided to drop k&r support. + +1999-11-01 Arnold D. Robbins + + * regex.c (init_syntax_once): move below definition of + ISALNUM etc., then use ISALNUM to init the table, so that + the word ops will work if i18n'ed. + (SYNTAX): And subscript with 0xFF for Latin-1 characters. + +1999-10-26 Alain Magloire + + * src/regex.c: Merge changes from GNU lib C. + * Updated the *.po files + +1999-10-26 Paul Eggert + + * src/grep.c (fillbuf): Don't report buffer size overflow if + newalloc == save and maxalloc == save. This can happen + e.g. when reading a large page-aligned file that contains + no newlines. + +1999-10-21 Paul Eggert + + * src/grep.c (usage): Give example. Clarify -F. + Explain exit status more clearly. + +1999-10-12 Paul Eggert + + * doc/grep.texi: Shorten the commentary about egrep and {. + "BSD grep" -> "traditional grep". + * doc/grep.1: Match recent changes to grep.texi. + +1999-10-11 Paul Eggert + + * NEWS, doc/grep.1, doc/grep.texi: New option --mmap. + * src/grep.c (mmap_option): New variable. + (long_options, reset, usage): Add --mmap. + Default is now read, not mmap. + + * doc/grep.1: Document -Z or --null. + +1999-10-11 Paul Eggert + + * doc/grep.texi: Fix texinfo glitches. POSIX -> POSIX.2 where + appropriate. + +1999-10-11 Paul Eggert + + * acconfig.h (ssize_t): New #undef. + + * configure.in (AC_CHECK_TYPE): Add ssize_t. + + * src/grep.c (PREFERRED_SAVE_FACTOR): New macro. + (reset): If the buffer has already been allocated, set bufsalloc to + be bufalloc / PREFERRED_SAVE_FACTOR. This avoids problems when + bufsalloc == bufalloc (possible after reading a large binary file). + (reset): Use PREFERRED_SAVE_FACTOR instead of magic constant. + Do not set bufbeg; nobody uses it. + Always set buflim. + Check for lseek error. + Use SEEK_CUR, not a magic constant. + (fillbuf): Return an error indication, not a count. + All callers changed. + Do not assume ssize_t fits in int. + Use PREFERRED_SAVE_FACTOR instead of magic constant. + Clean up mmap code. + Do not attempt to mmap zero bytes. + Check for lseek error. + Use SEEK_SET, not a magic constant. + Work correctly if read is interrupted. + (grepfile): Work correctly if open or close is interrupted. + + * src/system.h (SEEK_SET, SEEK_CUR): New macros. + +1999-10-02 Alain Magloire + + * src/regex.[ch]: upgrade from GNU lib C source tree. + + * make beta 2.3f available. + +1999-10-02 Paul Eggert + + * NEWS: egrep is now equivalent to `grep -E'. + The lower bound of an interval is not optional. + You can specify a matcher multiple types without error. + -u and -U are now allowed on non-DOS hosts, and have no effect. + * doc/grep.texi: Likewise. + * doc/grep.1: Likewise. + Fix some troff bugs that prevented `groff' from rendering the page. + + * src/egrepmat.c, src/fgrepmat.c, src/grepmat.c (default_matcher): + Remove. + (matcher): Add. + * src/grep.h (default_matcher): Remove. + (matcher): Now exported from ?grepmat.c, not grep.c. + + * src/dfa.c (lex): If { would start an invalid interval specification, + treat it as a normal character. + Remove (broken) support for {,M} meaning {0,M}. + Diagnose bogus intervals like {1,0}. + (closure): maxrep is now -1 to indicate no limit, not zero; + zero is a valid value for maxrep, meaning an upper bound of zero. + + * src/grep.c (short_options): New constant. + (long_options, main): -u and -U are now supported on Unix, + with no effect. + (matcher): Removed; now defined by ?grepmat.c. + (install_matcher): Renamed from setmatcher. + (setmatcher): New function. + (usage): Report new, more uniform option scheme. + (main): Do not initialize matcher; ?grepmat.c now does this. + Rely on setmatcher to catch matcher conflicts. + Default matcher is "grep". + + * src/search.c (matchers): + Remove "posix-egrep" matcher; no longer needed. + (Ecompile): Likewise. + The egrep matcher now has POSIX behavior. + + * tests/bre.tests: grep '\{' is no longer an error. + Fix test for interval too large, and enable it. + * tests/ere.tests: grep -E {1 is no longer an error + Likewise for a{1, a{1a, a{1a}, a{1,x}. + +1999-09-22 Paul Eggert + + * largefile.m4 (AC_SYS_LARGEFILE_FLAGS): Work around GCC + 2.95.1 bug with HP-UX 10.20. + +1999-09-12 Paul Eggert + + * src/grep.c (fillbuf): Fix typo: we sometimes reported + arithmetic overflow even when there wasn't any. + +1999-09-12 Paul Eggert + + * configure.in (AC_CHECK_FUNCS): Add memmove. + + * src/system.h (S_ISREG): New macro. + (memmove): Define if ! defined HAVE_MEMMOVE && ! defined memmove, + not if !defined STDC_HEADERS. This is needed for SunOS 4.1.4, + which defines STDC_HEADERS but lacks memmove. + + * src/grep.c (bufoffset): Needed even if !defined HAVE_MMAP. + (reset): Always fstat the file, since we always need its size if it is + regular. + Similarly, get the buffer offset of every regular file. + Set bufmapped to 0 if the file's initial offset is not a multiple + of the page size. + (fillbuf): Calculate an upper bound on how much memory we should + allocate only for regular files, since we don't know the sizes of + other files. + Don't bother to check whether the file offset is a multiple of the page + size, since we now do that just once in `reset'. + When an mmapped area would fall past the end of the file, trim it to + just before instead of giving up immediately and doing a `read'; + that avoids a worst-case behavior that could read half an mmapped file. + Fix bug when computing offsets on hosts that don't have mmap. + +1999-08-27 Paul Eggert + + * src/system.h (memmove): New macro. + + * src/grep.c (page_alloc): Reallocate the old buffer instead + of having both old and new buffers active simultaneously. + Remove valloc debugging variant, which no longer applies. + + (fillbuf): Rejigger the buffer allocation mechanism. The old + mechanism could allocate more than 10*N bytes for an N-byte + file, which was excessive. Check for arithmetic overflow a + bit more carefully. + +1999-08-25 Paul Eggert + + * src/grep.c (grepdir): + Don't assume that st_ino and st_dev must be integers; + POSIX.1 allows them to be floating-point (!). + + * src/vms_fab.h (arr_ptr): `:' -> `;' to fix typo. + +1999-08-18 Alain Magloire + + * 2.3e snapshot. + +1999-08-18 Alain Magloire + + * src/search.c: On a CRAY J90 system running UNICOS 8.0. + Compilation of ./src/search.c failed because the declaration of + the variable "regex": + static struct re_pattern_buffer regex; + conflicted with a previous declaration search.c #includes "system.h", + which #includes <stdlib.h>, which declares : + extern char *regex __((char *_Re, char *_Subject, ...)); + The declaration in search.c is local to that one source file. + I just changed its name to something less likely to conflict. + (I called it "regexbuf", but you could pick any name you want.) + Excerpt email from Dean Kopesky. + +1999-08-16 Paul Eggert + + Upgrade large-file support to the version used in tar and + textutils. + + * Makefile.am (ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS): Define to be empty. + (M4DIR, ACINCLUDE_INPUTS): New macros. + ($(srcdir)/acinclude.m4): New rule. + + * configure.in (AC_CANONICAL_HOST, AM_C_PROTOTYPES): Add. + (AC_SYS_LARGEFILE): Renamed from AC_LFS, for compatibility + with what should appear in the next autoconf release. + + * m4/largefile.m4: Renamed from m4/lfs.m4. + + * src/ansi2knr.1, src/ansi2knr.c, config.guess, config.sub: + New files. config.guess and config.sub ar needed by the new + AC_SYS_LARGEFILE. ansi2knr is needed by AM_C_PROTOTYPES, + which in turn is needed by the new AC_SYS_LARGEFILE. + +1999-08-16 Alain Magloire + + * 2.3d snapshot on ftp server. + +1999-07-26 Paul Eggert + +Several GNU tools have options to process arbitrary file names, even +file names that contain newline characters. These include `find +-print0', `perl -0', `sort -z', and `xargs -0'. It'd be handy if GNU +grep also processed such file names. Here's a proposed patch to do +this, relative to grep 2.3c. This patch introduces two options, one +for the data, and one for the file names. (Sometimes one wants +null-terminated file names in the output, and sometimes one wants to +process lists of null-terminated strings, and these are orthogonal +axes.) + + * NEWS, doc/grep.texi: New -z or --null-data and -Z or --null options. + * src/grep.c (long_options, usage, main): Likewise. + + * src/dfa.h (dfasyntax): New eol parameter. + * src/dfa.c (eolbyte): New var. + (dfasyntax): Set it from new parameter. + (lex, dfastat, build_state, dfaexec): Use it instead of '\n'. + + * src/grep.h (eolbyte): New decl. + * src/grep.c (eolbyte): New var. + (nlscan, prpending, prtext, grepbuf, grep): Use it instead of '\n'. + (filename_mask): New var. + (prline, grepfile): Output NUL separator if filename_mask is zero. + (grep): Look for '\200' as the hallmark of a binary file, not '\0', + if -z or --null-data is specified, since it implies that '\0' is + expected as text. + + * src/search.c (Gcompile, Ecompile): Pass eolbyte to dfasyntax. + (EGexecute, Fexecute): Use eolbyte instead of '\n'. + +1999-06-15 Alain Magloire + + * src/grep.c, doc/grep{1,texi} : + --revert-match should be --invert-match. + Correction proposed by Karl Berry. + +1999-06-12 Alain Magloire + + * doc/grep.{1,texi}: add description for --with-filename. + Noted missing by UEBAYASHI Masao. + +1999-03-17 Paul Eggert + + * NEWS: Add GREP_OPTIONS. + + * doc/grep.texi: Document GREP_OPTIONS, and the other + environment variables. Fix doc for [:blank:], [:cntrl:], [:punct:]. + + * src/grep.c (prepend_args, prepend_default_options): New functions. + (main): Use them to implement GREP_OPTIONS. + * src/system.h (getenv): New decl. + +1999-03-16 Volker Borchert + + * configure.in: Use case case ... esac for checking Visual C++. + When ${CC} contains options it was not recognize. + +1999-03-07 Paul Eggert + + * src/grep.c (usage): Don't report -E, -F, and -G unless we're grep. + (main): Don't match options -E, -F, and -G unless we're grep. + Remove after-the-fact check for options -E, -F, and -G, since + they're no longer needed. + +1999-03-05 Eli Zaretskii + + * src/grep.c (main): Print the name of the default matcher instead + of just "grep". + +1999-02-06 Alain Magloire + + * tests/*.awk : Linux users are seeing "Broken Pipe" on make check. + The problem is that grep does not drain its stdin, thus the previous + process in the pipeline receives a SIGPIPE. Other shells are silent + about this. There is actually no failure, since the broken pipe is + expected. You can work around it by changing the pipeline, so that + the input is drained, like this: + status=`echo 'check' | { ${GREP} -E -e pattern >/dev/null 2>&1; + echo $?; cat >/dev/null; }`; if test $status -ne $errnu then ... fi + Excerpt email from Andreas Schwab. + +1999-02-23 Alain Magloire + + * src/grep.c : Restrict the use of -E, -F, -G + to only grep driver, Posix behaviour. {f,e}grep + the matcher is already set. This change may brake + scripts, warn in NEWS. + + * doc/grep.{1,texi} : -C takes arguments, upgrade manual. + + * beta 2.3a + +1999-02-23 Alain Magloire + + * configure.in : Change the configure VC test from + 'test x$ac_cv_prog_CC = xcl;' to 'test x"$ac_cv_prog_CC" = xcl;' + Email from Joshua R. Poulson. + +1999-02-23 Paul Eggert + + Fix porting bug reported by Amakawa Shuhei for SunOS 4.1.4-JL. + The btowc.c shipped with grep 2.3 is incorrect for Solaris + 2.5.1 and earlier, as it assumes UTF8, which these OSes do not + support. Solaris 7 supports btowc, so there's no need to ship + a substitute for it. The only questionable case is Solaris + 2.6, which lacks btowc but does support UTF8. However, 2.6 + supports UTF8 but only as a demonstration (for an English + locale!); Japanese Solaris 2.6 users typically use EUC, or + sometimes shift-JIS, but they cannot use UTF8 since Japanese + UTF8 is not supported. Hence there's no point to having grep + substitute a btowc that uses UTF8, as it is either redundant, + or it will almost invariably have incorrect behavior. + + * configure.in (AC_CHECK_HEADERS): Don't set USE_WCHAR. + (AC_CHECK_FUNCS): Add btowc, wctype. + (AC_REPLACE_FUNCS): Don't replace btowc; our replacement is + invariably doing the wrong thing anyway, at least on SunOS/Solaris. + Don't bother to check for wctype in -lw, as we don't support + wide characters on Solaris 2.5.1 or earlier anyway. + + * bootstrap/Makefile.try (OBJS): Remove btowc.$(OBJEXT). + + * src/btowc.c: Removed; no longer needed. + +1999-02-19 Paul Eggert + + * NEWS: Fix typo when talking about the old behavior of + silently skipping directories; it was grep 2.1, not grep 2.2. + +1999-02-15 Alain Magloire + + * bootstrap/Makefile.try : add DJGPP DEFS. + Done by Elie Zaretsckii. + 1999-02-14 Alain Magloire * m4/gettext.m4 : Guard [] with changequote. diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/NEWS b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/NEWS index d55d88c..efeaf41 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/NEWS +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/NEWS @@ -1,3 +1,53 @@ +Version 2.4: + + - egrep is now equivalent to `grep -E' as required by POSIX, + removing a longstanding source of confusion and incompatibility. + `grep' is now more forgiving about stray `{'s, for backward + compatibility with traditional egrep. + + - The lower bound of an interval is not optional. + You must use an explicit zero, e.g. `x{0,10}' instead of `x{,10}'. + (The old documentation incorrectly claimed that it was optional.) + + - The --revert-match option has been renamed to --invert-match. + + - The --fixed-regexp option has been renamed to --fixed-string. + + - New option -H or --with-filename. + + - New option --mmap. By default, GNU grep now uses read instead of mmap. + This is faster on some hosts, and is safer on all. + + - The new option -z or --null-data causes `grep' to treat a zero byte + (the ASCII NUL character) as a line terminator in input data, and + to treat newlines as ordinary data. + + - The new option -Z or --null causes `grep' to output a zero byte + instead of the normal separator after a file name. + + - These two options can be used with commands like `find -print0', + `perl -0', `sort -z', and `xargs -0' to process arbitrary file names, + even those that contain newlines. + + - The environment variable GREP_OPTIONS specifies default options; + e.g. GREP_OPTIONS='--directories=skip' reestablishes grep 2.1's + behavior of silently skipping directories. + + - You can specify a matcher multiple times without error, e.g. + `grep -E -E' or `fgrep -F'. It is still an error to specify + conflicting matchers. + + - -u and -U are now allowed on non-DOS hosts, and have no effect. + + - Modifications of the tests scripts to go around the "Broken Pipe" + errors from bash. See Bash FAQ. + + - New option -r or --recursive or --directories=recurse. + (This option was also in grep 2.3, but wasn't announced here.) + + - --without-included-regex disable, was causing bogus reports .i.e + doing more harm then good. + Version 2.3: - When searching a binary file FOO, grep now just reports @@ -19,7 +69,7 @@ Version 2.3: `grep: DIRECTORY: Binary file matches' (or nothing) otherwise. The new -d ACTION or --directories=ACTION option affects directory handling. - `-d skip' causes `grep' to silently skip directories, as in grep 2.2; + `-d skip' causes `grep' to silently skip directories, as in grep 2.1; `-d read' (the default) causes `grep' to read directories if possible, as in earlier versions of grep. diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/THANKS b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/THANKS index d87d19b..924b6cf 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/THANKS +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/THANKS @@ -1,5 +1,6 @@ Aharon Robbins <arnold@gnu.org> -Andreas Schwab <schwab@issan.informatik.uni-dortmund.de> +Alain Magloire <alainm@rcsm.ece.mcgill.ca> +Andreas Schwab <schwab@suse.de> Andreas Ley <andy@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de> Ben Elliston <bje@cygnus.com> David J MacKenzie <djm@catapult.va.pubnix.com> @@ -8,6 +9,7 @@ Florian La Roche <florian@knorke.saar.de> Franc,ois Pinard <pinard@IRO.UMontreal.CA> Grant McDorman <grant@isgtec.com> Harald Hanche-Olsen <hanche@math.ntnu.no> +Jeff Bailey <jbailey@nisa.net> Jim Hand <jhand@austx.tandem.com> Jim Meyering <meyering@asic.sc.ti.com> Jochen Hein <jochen.hein@delphi.central.de> @@ -27,6 +29,7 @@ Miles Bader <miles@ccs.mt.nec.co.jp> Olaf Kirch <okir@ns.lst.de> Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com> Paul Kimoto <kimoto@spacenet.tn.cornell.edu> +Phillip C. Brisco <phillip.craig.brisco@ccmail.census.gov> Philippe Defert <Philippe.Defert@cern.ch> Philippe De Muyter <phdm@info.ucl.ac.be> Roland Roberts <rroberts@muller.com> @@ -37,6 +40,7 @@ Sydoruk Stepan <step@unitex.kiev.ua> Tom 'moof' Spindler <dogcow@ccs.neu.edu> Tom Tromey <tromey@creche.cygnus.com> Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com> +UEBAYASHI Masao <masao@nf.enveng.titech.ac.jp> Volker Borchert <bt@teknon.de> Wichert Akkerman <wakkerma@wi.leidenuniv.nl> William Bader <william@nscs.fast.net> diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/config.hin b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/config.hin index 4b4e289..8922a63 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/config.hin +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/config.hin @@ -55,6 +55,9 @@ /* Version number. */ #undef VERSION +/* Define to `int' if <sys/types.h> doesn't define. */ +#undef ssize_t + /* Hack for Visual C++ suggested by irox. */ #undef alloca @@ -100,6 +103,9 @@ /* Define if you have the memchr function. */ #undef HAVE_MEMCHR +/* Define if you have the memmove function. */ +#undef HAVE_MEMMOVE + /* Define if you have the munmap function. */ #undef HAVE_MUNMAP @@ -130,6 +136,9 @@ /* Define if you have the strerror function. */ #undef HAVE_STRERROR +/* Define if you have the wctype function. */ +#undef HAVE_WCTYPE + /* Define if you have the <argz.h> header file. */ #undef HAVE_ARGZ_H @@ -183,3 +192,16 @@ /* Define if you have the i library (-li). */ #undef HAVE_LIBI + +/* Number of bits in a file offset, on hosts where this is settable. */ +#undef _FILE_OFFSET_BITS + +/* Define to make fseeko etc. visible, on some hosts. */ +#undef _LARGEFILE_SOURCE + +/* Define for large files, on AIX-style hosts. */ +#undef _LARGE_FILES + +/* Define if compiler has function prototypes */ +#undef PROTOTYPES + diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/grep.texi b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/grep.texi index 23b0553..50a6938 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/grep.texi +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/grep.texi @@ -22,19 +22,20 @@ @defcodeindex op @syncodeindex op fn +@syncodeindex vr fn @ifinfo @direntry * grep: (grep). print lines matching a pattern. @end direntry -This file documents @sc{grep}, a pattern matching engine. +This file documents @command{grep}, a pattern matching engine. Published by the Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA -Copyright (C) 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +Copyright 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice @@ -67,7 +68,7 @@ by the Foundation. @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll -Copyright @copyright{} 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +Copyright @copyright{} 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @sp 2 Published by the Free Software Foundation, @* @@ -92,43 +93,48 @@ by the Foundation. @page -@node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir) -@comment node-name, next, previous, up +@ifnottex +@node Top +@top Grep -@ifinfo -This document was produced for version @value{VERSION} of @sc{GNU} @sc{grep}. -@end ifinfo +@command{grep} searches for lines matching a pattern. + +This document was produced for version @value{VERSION} of @sc{gnu} +@command{grep}. +@end ifnottex @menu * Introduction:: Introduction. -* Invoking:: Invoking @sc{grep}; description of options. -* Diagnostics:: Exit status returned by @sc{grep}. -* Grep Programs:: @sc{grep} programs. +* Invoking:: Invoking @command{grep}; description of options. +* Diagnostics:: Exit status returned by @command{grep}. +* Grep Programs:: @command{grep} programs. * Regular Expressions:: Regular Expressions. +* Usage:: Examples. * Reporting Bugs:: Reporting Bugs. * Concept Index:: A menu with all the topics in this manual. -* Index:: A menu with all @sc{grep} commands +* Index:: A menu with all @command{grep} commands and command-line options. @end menu -@node Introduction, Invoking, Top, Top -@comment node-name, next, previous, up +@node Introduction @chapter Introduction @cindex Searching for a pattern. -@sc{grep} searches the input files for lines containing a match to a given + +@command{grep} searches the input files +for lines containing a match to a given pattern list. When it finds a match in a line, it copies the line to standard output (by default), or does whatever other sort of output you have requested -with options. @sc{grep} expects to do the matching on text. +with options. @command{grep} expects to do the matching on text. Since newline is also a separator for the list of patterns, there is no way to match newline characters in a text. -@node Invoking, Diagnostics, Introduction, Top -@comment node-name, next, previous, up -@chapter Invoking @sc{grep} +@node Invoking +@chapter Invoking @command{grep} -@sc{grep} comes with a rich set of options from POSIX.2 and GNU extensions. +@command{grep} comes with a rich set of options from @sc{posix.2} and @sc{gnu} +extensions. @table @samp @@ -138,7 +144,7 @@ is no way to match newline characters in a text. @opindex -count @cindex counting lines Suppress normal output; instead print a count of matching -lines for each input file. With the @samp{-v}, @samp{--revert-match} option, +lines for each input file. With the @samp{-v}, @samp{--invert-match} option, count non-matching lines. @item -e @var{pattern} @@ -146,15 +152,15 @@ count non-matching lines. @opindex -e @opindex --regexp=@var{pattern} @cindex pattern list -Use @var{pattern} as the pattern; useful to protect patterns +Use @var{pattern} as the pattern; useful to protect patterns beginning with a @samp{-}. -@item -f @var{file} +@item -f @var{file} @itemx --file=@var{file} -@opindex -f -@opindex --file +@opindex -f +@opindex --file @cindex pattern from file -Obtain patterns from @var{file}, one per line. The empty +Obtain patterns from @var{file}, one per line. The empty file contains zero patterns, and therefore matches nothing. @item -i @@ -162,15 +168,15 @@ file contains zero patterns, and therefore matches nothing. @opindex -i @opindex --ignore-case @cindex case insensitive search -Ignore case distinctions in both the pattern and the input files. +Ignore case distinctions in both the pattern and the input files. @item -l @itemx --files-with-matches @opindex -l @opindex --files-with-matches @cindex names of matching files -Suppress normal output; instead print the name of each input -file from which output would normally have been printed. +Suppress normal output; instead print the name of each input +file from which output would normally have been printed. The scanning of every file will stop on the first match. @item -n @@ -178,7 +184,7 @@ The scanning of every file will stop on the first match. @opindex -n @opindex --line-number @cindex line numbering -Prefix each line of output with the line number within its input file. +Prefix each line of output with the line number within its input file. @item -q @itemx --quiet @@ -187,7 +193,7 @@ Prefix each line of output with the line number within its input file. @opindex --quiet @opindex --silent @cindex quiet, silent -Quiet; suppress normal output. The scanning of every file will stop on +Quiet; suppress normal output. The scanning of every file will stop on the first match. Also see the @samp{-s} or @samp{--no-messages} option. @item -s @@ -196,31 +202,32 @@ the first match. Also see the @samp{-s} or @samp{--no-messages} option. @opindex --no-messages @cindex suppress error messages Suppress error messages about nonexistent or unreadable files. -Portability note: unlike GNU @sc{grep}, BSD @sc{grep} does not comply -with POSIX.2, because BSD @sc{grep} lacks a @samp{-q} option and its -@samp{-s} option behaves like GNU @sc{grep}'s @samp{-q} option. Shell -scripts intended to be portable to BSD @sc{grep} should avoid both +Portability note: unlike @sc{gnu} @command{grep}, traditional +@command{grep} did not conform to @sc{posix.2}, because traditional +@command{grep} lacked a @samp{-q} option and its @samp{-s} option behaved +like @sc{gnu} @command{grep}'s @samp{-q} option. Shell scripts intended +to be portable to traditional @command{grep} should avoid both @samp{-q} and @samp{-s} and should redirect output to @file{/dev/null} instead. @item -v -@itemx --revert-match +@itemx --invert-match @opindex -v -@opindex --revert-match -@cindex revert matching +@opindex --invert-match +@cindex invert matching @cindex print non-matching lines -Invert the sense of matching, to select non-matching lines. +Invert the sense of matching, to select non-matching lines. @item -x @itemx --line-regexp @opindex -x @opindex --line-regexp @cindex match the whole line -Select only those matches that exactly match the whole line. +Select only those matches that exactly match the whole line. @end table -@section GNU Extensions +@section @sc{gnu} Extensions @table @samp @@ -240,17 +247,17 @@ Print @var{num} lines of trailing context after matching lines. @cindex context lines, before match Print @var{num} lines of leading context before matching lines. -@item -C -@itemx --context@var{[=num]} +@item -C @var{num} +@itemx --context=[@var{num}] @opindex -C @opindex --context @cindex context Print @var{num} lines (default 2) of output context. -@item -NUM +@item -@var{num} @opindex -NUM -Same as @samp{--context=@var{num}} lines of leading and trailing +Same as @samp{--context=@var{num}} lines of leading and trailing context. However, grep will never print any given line more than once. @@ -259,8 +266,8 @@ context. However, grep will never print any given line more than once. @opindex -V @opindex --version @cindex Version, printing -Print the version number of @sc{grep} to the standard output stream. -This version number should be included in all bug reports. +Print the version number of @command{grep} to the standard output stream. +This version number should be included in all bug reports. @item --help @opindex --help @@ -274,24 +281,32 @@ and the bug-reporting address, then exit. @opindex --byte-offset @cindex byte offset Print the byte offset within the input file before each line of output. -When @sc{grep} runs on MS-DOS or MS-Windows, the printed byte offsets +When @command{grep} runs on @sc{ms-dos} or MS-Windows, the printed +byte offsets depend on whether the @samp{-u} (@samp{--unix-byte-offsets}) option is used; see below. @item -d @var{action} @itemx --directories=@var{action} -@opindex -d +@opindex -d @opindex --directories @cindex directory search -If an input file is a directory, use @var{action} to process it. -By default, @var{action} is @samp{read}, which means that directories are -read just as if they were ordinary files (some operating systems -and filesystems disallow this, and will cause @sc{grep} to print error +If an input file is a directory, use @var{action} to process it. +By default, @var{action} is @samp{read}, which means that directories are +read just as if they were ordinary files (some operating systems +and filesystems disallow this, and will cause @command{grep} to print error messages for every directory). If @var{action} is @samp{skip}, directories are silently skipped. If @var{action} is @samp{recurse}, -@sc{grep} reads all files under each directory, recursively; this is +@command{grep} reads all files under each directory, recursively; this is equivalent to the @samp{-r} option. +@item -H +@itemx --with-filename +@opindex -H +@opindex --With-filename +@cindex with filename prefix +Print the filename for each match. + @item -h @itemx --no-filename @opindex -h @@ -304,9 +319,9 @@ Suppress the prefixing of filenames on output when multiple files are searched. @opindex -L @opindex --files-without-match @cindex files which don't match -Suppress normal output; instead print the name of each input -file from which no output would normally have been printed. -The scanning of every file will stop on the first match. +Suppress normal output; instead print the name of each input +file from which no output would normally have been printed. +The scanning of every file will stop on the first match. @item -a @itemx --text @@ -314,14 +329,14 @@ The scanning of every file will stop on the first match. @opindex --text @cindex suppress binary data @cindex binary files -Do not suppress output lines that contain binary data. -Normally, if the first few bytes of a file indicate +Do not suppress output lines that contain binary data. +Normally, if the first few bytes of a file indicate that the file contains binary data, grep outputs only a message saying that the file matches the pattern. This -option causes grep to act as if the file is a text +option causes grep to act as if the file is a text file, even if it would otherwise be treated as binary. -@emph{Warning:} the result might be binary garbage -printed to the terminal, which can have nasty +@emph{Warning:} the result might be binary garbage +printed to the terminal, which can have nasty side-effects if the terminal driver interprets some of it as commands. @@ -330,12 +345,12 @@ it as commands. @opindex -w @opindex --word-regexp @cindex matching whole words -Select only those lines containing matches that form -whole words. The test is that the matching substring -must either be at the beginning of the line, or preceded +Select only those lines containing matches that form +whole words. The test is that the matching substring +must either be at the beginning of the line, or preceded by a non-word constituent character. Similarly, it must be either at the end of the line or followed by -a non-word constituent character. Word-constituent +a non-word constituent character. Word-constituent characters are letters, digits, and the underscore. @item -r @@ -359,18 +374,18 @@ Obsolete synonym for @samp{-i}. @opindex --binary @cindex DOS/Windows binary files @cindex binary files, DOS/Windows -Treat the file(s) as binary. By default, under MS-DOS -and MS-Windows, @sc{grep} guesses the file type by looking -at the contents of the first 32KB read from the file. -If @sc{grep} decides the file is a text file, it strips the -CR characters from the original file contents (to make -regular expressions with @code{^} and @code{$} work correctly). +Treat the file(s) as binary. By default, under @sc{ms-dos} +and MS-Windows, @command{grep} guesses the file type by looking +at the contents of the first 32kB read from the file. +If @command{grep} decides the file is a text file, it strips the +@code{CR} characters from the original file contents (to make +regular expressions with @code{^} and @code{$} work correctly). Specifying @samp{-U} overrules this guesswork, causing all -files to be read and passed to the matching mechanism -verbatim; if the file is a text file with CR/LF pairs -at the end of each line, this will cause some regular -expressions to fail. This option is only supported on -MS-DOS and MS-Windows. +files to be read and passed to the matching mechanism +verbatim; if the file is a text file with @code{CR/LF} pairs +at the end of each line, this will cause some regular +expressions to fail. This option has no effect on platforms other than +@sc{ms-dos} and MS-Windows. @item -u @itemx --unix-byte-offsets @@ -378,38 +393,146 @@ MS-DOS and MS-Windows. @opindex --unix-byte-offsets @cindex DOS byte offsets @cindex byte offsets, on DOS/Windows -Report Unix-style byte offsets. This switch causes -@sc{grep} to report byte offsets as if the file were Unix style -text file, i.e. the byte offsets ignore the CR characters which were -stripped off. This will produce results identical to running @sc{grep} on -a Unix machine. This option has no effect unless @samp{-b} -option is also used; it is only supported on MS-DOS and +Report Unix-style byte offsets. This switch causes +@command{grep} to report byte offsets as if the file were Unix style +text file, i.e., the byte offsets ignore the @code{CR} characters which were +stripped. This will produce results identical to running @command{grep} on +a Unix machine. This option has no effect unless @samp{-b} +option is also used; it has no effect on platforms other than @sc{ms-dos} and MS-Windows. +@item --mmap +@opindex --mmap +@cindex memory mapped input +If possible, use the @code{mmap} system call to read input, instead of +the default @code{read} system call. In some situations, @samp{--mmap} +yields better performance. However, @samp{--mmap} can cause undefined +behavior (including core dumps) if an input file shrinks while +@command{grep} is operating, or if an I/O error occurs. + +@item -Z +@itemx --null +@opindex -Z +@opindex --null +@cindex zero-terminated file names +Output a zero byte (the @sc{ascii} @code{NUL} character) instead of the +character that normally follows a file name. For example, @samp{grep +-lZ} outputs a zero byte after each file name instead of the usual +newline. This option makes the output unambiguous, even in the presence +of file names containing unusual characters like newlines. This option +can be used with commands like @samp{find -print0}, @samp{perl -0}, +@samp{sort -z}, and @samp{xargs -0} to process arbitrary file names, +even those that contain newline characters. + +@item -z +@itemx --null-data +@opindex -z +@opindex --null-data +@cindex zero-terminated lines +Treat the input as a set of lines, each terminated by a zero byte (the +@sc{ascii} @code{NUL} character) instead of a newline. Like the @samp{-Z} +or @samp{--null} option, this option can be used with commands like +@samp{sort -z} to process arbitrary file names. + @end table -Several additional options control which variant of the @sc{grep} +Several additional options control which variant of the @command{grep} matching engine is used. @xref{Grep Programs}. -@sc{grep} uses the environment variable @var{LANG} to -provide internationalization support, if compiled with this feature. +@section Environment Variables + +Grep's behavior is affected by the following environment variables. +@cindex environment variables + +@table @code + +@item GREP_OPTIONS +@vindex GREP_OPTIONS +@cindex default options environment variable +This variable specifies default options to be placed in front of any +explicit options. For example, if @code{GREP_OPTIONS} is @samp{--text +--directories=skip}, @command{grep} behaves as if the two options +@samp{--text} and @samp{--directories=skip} had been specified before +any explicit options. Option specifications are separated by +whitespace. A backslash escapes the next character, so it can be used to +specify an option containing whitespace or a backslash. + +@item LC_ALL +@itemx LC_MESSAGES +@itemx LANG +@vindex LC_ALL +@vindex LC_MESSAGES +@vindex LANG +@cindex language of messages +@cindex message language +@cindex national language support +@cindex NLS +@cindex translation of message language +These variables specify the @code{LC_MESSAGES} locale, which determines +the language that @command{grep} uses for messages. The locale is determined +by the first of these variables that is set. American English is used +if none of these environment variables are set, or if the message +catalog is not installed, or if @command{grep} was not compiled with national +language support (@sc{nls}). + +@item LC_ALL +@itemx LC_CTYPE +@itemx LANG +@vindex LC_ALL +@vindex LC_CTYPE +@vindex LANG +@cindex character type +@cindex national language support +@cindex NLS +These variables specify the @code{LC_CTYPE} locale, which determines the +type of characters, e.g., which characters are whitespace. The locale is +determined by the first of these variables that is set. The @sc{posix} +locale is used if none of these environment variables are set, or if the +locale catalog is not installed, or if @command{grep} was not compiled with +national language support (@sc{nls}). + +@item POSIXLY_CORRECT +@vindex POSIXLY_CORRECT +If set, @command{grep} behaves as @sc{posix.2} requires; otherwise, +@command{grep} behaves more like other @sc{gnu} programs. @sc{posix.2} +requires that options that +follow file names must be treated as file names; by default, such +options are permuted to the front of the operand list and are treated as +options. Also, @sc{posix.2} requires that unrecognized options be +diagnosed as +``illegal'', but since they are not really against the law the default +is to diagnose them as ``invalid''. @code{POSIXLY_CORRECT} also +disables @code{_@var{N}_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_}, described below. + +@item _@var{N}_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_ +@vindex _@var{N}_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_ +(Here @code{@var{N}} is @command{grep}'s numeric process ID.) If the +@var{i}th character of this environment variable's value is @samp{1}, do +not consider the @var{i}th operand of @command{grep} to be an option, even if +it appears to be one. A shell can put this variable in the environment +for each command it runs, specifying which operands are the results of +file name wildcard expansion and therefore should not be treated as +options. This behavior is available only with the @sc{gnu} C library, and +only when @code{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is not set. -@node Diagnostics, Grep Programs, Invoking, Top -@comment node-name, next, previous, up +@end table + +@node Diagnostics @chapter Diagnostics + Normally, exit status is 0 if matches were found, and 1 if no matches were found (the @samp{-v} option inverts the sense of the exit status). -Exit status is 2 if there were syntax errors in the pattern, +Exit status is 2 if there were syntax errors in the pattern, inaccessible input files, or other system errors. -@node Grep Programs, Regular Expressions, Diagnostics, Top -@comment node-name, next, previous, up -@chapter @sc{grep} programs +@node Grep Programs +@chapter @command{grep} programs -@sc{grep} searches the named input files (or standard input if no +@command{grep} searches the named input files (or standard input if no files are named, or the file name @file{-} is given) for lines containing -a match to the given pattern. By default, @sc{grep} prints the matching lines. -There are three major variants of @sc{grep}, controlled by the following options. +a match to the given pattern. By default, @command{grep} prints the +matching lines. There are three major variants of @command{grep}, +controlled by the following options. @table @samp @@ -418,14 +541,14 @@ There are three major variants of @sc{grep}, controlled by the following options @opindex -G @opindex --basic-regexp @cindex matching basic regular expressions -Interpret pattern as a basic regular expression. This is the default. +Interpret pattern as a basic regular expression. This is the default. @item -E -@item --extended-regexp +@itemx --extended-regexp @opindex -E @opindex --extended-regexp @cindex matching extended regular expressions -Interpret pattern as an extended regular expression. +Interpret pattern as an extended regular expression. @item -F @@ -439,60 +562,66 @@ by newlines, any of which is to be matched. @end table In addition, two variant programs @sc{egrep} and @sc{fgrep} are available. -@sc{egrep} is similar (but not identical) to @samp{grep -E}, and -is compatible with the historical Unix @sc{egrep}. @sc{fgrep} is the +@sc{egrep} is the same as @samp{grep -E}. @sc{fgrep} is the same as @samp{grep -F}. -@node Regular Expressions, Reporting Bugs, Grep Programs, Top -@comment node-name, next, previous, up +@node Regular Expressions @chapter Regular Expressions @cindex regular expressions -A @dfn{regular expression} is a pattern that describes a set of strings. +A @dfn{regular expression} is a pattern that describes a set of strings. Regular expressions are constructed analogously to arithmetic expressions, -by using various operators to combine smaller expressions. -@sc{grep} understands two different versions of regular expression -syntax: ``basic'' and ``extended''. In GNU @sc{grep}, there is no -difference in available functionality using either syntax. -In other implementations, basic regular expressions are less powerful. -The following description applies to extended regular expressions; +by using various operators to combine smaller expressions. +@command{grep} understands two different versions of regular expression +syntax: ``basic'' and ``extended''. In @sc{gnu} @command{grep}, there is no +difference in available functionality using either syntax. +In other implementations, basic regular expressions are less powerful. +The following description applies to extended regular expressions; differences for basic regular expressions are summarized afterwards. -The fundamental building blocks are the regular expressions that match +The fundamental building blocks are the regular expressions that match a single character. Most characters, including all letters and digits, -are regular expressions that match themselves. Any metacharacter +are regular expressions that match themselves. Any metacharacter with special meaning may be quoted by preceding it with a backslash. A list of characters enclosed by @samp{[} and @samp{]} matches any single character in that list; if the first character of the list is the -caret @samp{^}, then it +caret @samp{^}, then it matches any character @strong{not} in the list. For example, the regular expression @samp{[0123456789]} matches any single digit. -A range of @sc{ascii} characters may be specified by giving the first -and last characters, separated by a hyphen. Finally, certain named -classes of characters are predefined. Their names are self explanatory, -and they are : +A range of @sc{ascii} characters may be specified by giving the first +and last characters, separated by a hyphen. + +Finally, certain named classes of characters are predefined, as follows. +Their interpretation depends on the @code{LC_CTYPE} locale; the +interpretation below is that of the @sc{posix} locale, which is the default +if no @code{LC_CTYPE} locale is specified. @cindex classes of characters @cindex character classes @table @samp @item [:alnum:] -@opindex alnum -@cindex alphanumeric characters -Any of [:digit:] or [:alpha:] +@opindex alnum +@cindex alphanumeric characters +Any of @samp{[:digit:]} or @samp{[:alpha:]} @item [:alpha:] @opindex alpha @cindex alphabetic characters -Any local-specific or one of the @sc{ascii} letters:@* +Any letter:@* @code{a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z},@* @code{A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z}. +@item [:blank:] +@opindex blank +@cindex blank characters +Space or tab. + @item [:cntrl:] @opindex cntrl @cindex control characters -Any of @code{BEL}, @code{BS}, @code{CR}, @code{FF}, @code{HT}, -@code{NL}, or @code{VT}. +Any character with octal codes 000 through 037, or @code{DEL} (octal +code 177). @item [:digit:] @opindex digit @@ -503,7 +632,7 @@ Any one of @code{0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9}. @item [:graph:] @opindex graph @cindex graphic characters -Anything that is not a @samp{[:alphanum:]} or @samp{[:punct:]}. +Anything that is not a @samp{[:alnum:]} or @samp{[:punct:]}. @item [:lower:] @opindex lower @@ -514,13 +643,12 @@ Any one of @code{a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z}. @opindex print @cindex printable characters Any character from the @samp{[:space:]} class, and any character that is -@strong{not} in the @samp{[:isgraph:]} class. +@strong{not} in the @samp{[:graph:]} class. @item [:punct:] @opindex punct @cindex punctuation characters -Any one of @code{!@: " #% & ' ( ) ; < = > ?@: [ \ ] * + , - .@: / : ^ _ @{ | @}}. - +Any one of @code{!@: " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - .@: / : ; < = > ?@: @@ [ \ ] ^ _ ` @{ | @} ~}. @item [:space:] @opindex space @@ -541,13 +669,13 @@ Any one of @code{a b c d e f A B C D E F 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9}. @end table For example, @samp{[[:alnum:]]} means @samp{[0-9A-Za-z]}, except the latter -form is dependent upon the @sc{ascii} character encoding, whereas the -former is portable. (Note that the brackets in these class names are -part of the symbolic names, and must be included in addition to -the brackets delimiting the bracket list). Most metacharacters lose +form is dependent upon the @sc{ascii} character encoding, whereas the +former is portable. (Note that the brackets in these class names are +part of the symbolic names, and must be included in addition to +the brackets delimiting the bracket list.) Most metacharacters lose their special meaning inside lists. To include a literal @samp{]}, place it first in the list. Similarly, to include a literal @samp{^}, place it anywhere -but first. Finally, to include a literal @samp{-}, place it last. +but first. Finally, to include a literal @samp{-}, place it last. The period @samp{.} matches any single character. The symbol @samp{\w} is a synonym for @samp{[[:alnum:]]} and @samp{\W} is a synonym for @@ -555,12 +683,12 @@ is a synonym for @samp{[[:alnum:]]} and @samp{\W} is a synonym for The caret @samp{^} and the dollar sign @samp{$} are metacharacters that respectively match the empty string at the beginning and end -of a line. The symbols @samp{\<} and @samp{\>} respectively match the +of a line. The symbols @samp{\<} and @samp{\>} respectively match the empty string at the beginning and end of a word. The symbol -@samp{\b} matches the empty string at the edge of a word, and @samp{\B} -matches the empty string provided it's not at the edge of a word. +@samp{\b} matches the empty string at the edge of a word, and @samp{\B} +matches the empty string provided it's not at the edge of a word. -A regular expression may be followed by one of several +A regular expression may be followed by one of several repetition operators: @@ -580,7 +708,7 @@ The preceding item will be matched zero or more times. @item + @opindex + -@cindex plus sign +@cindex plus sign The preceding item will be matched one or more times. @item @{@var{n}@} @@ -595,12 +723,6 @@ The preceding item is matched exactly @var{n} times. @cindex match sub-expression n or more times The preceding item is matched n or more times. -@item @{,@var{m}@} -@opindex @{,m@} -@cindex braces, first argument omitted -@cindex match sub-expression at most m times -The preceding item is optional and is matched at most @var{m} times. - @item @{@var{n},@var{m}@} @opindex @{n,m@} @cindex braces, two arguments @@ -609,17 +731,17 @@ The preceding item is matched at least @var{n} times, but not more than @end table -Two regular expressions may be concatenated; the resulting regular +Two regular expressions may be concatenated; the resulting regular expression matches any string formed by concatenating two substrings -that respectively match the concatenated subexpressions. +that respectively match the concatenated subexpressions. -Two regular expressions may be joined by the infix operator @samp{|}; the -resulting regular expression matches any string matching either +Two regular expressions may be joined by the infix operator @samp{|}; the +resulting regular expression matches any string matching either subexpression. -Repetition takes precedence over concatenation, which in turn +Repetition takes precedence over concatenation, which in turn takes precedence over alternation. A whole subexpression may be -enclosed in parentheses to override these precedence rules. +enclosed in parentheses to override these precedence rules. The backreference @samp{\@var{n}}, where @var{n} is a single digit, matches the substring previously matched by the @var{n}th parenthesized subexpression @@ -631,40 +753,201 @@ In basic regular expressions the metacharacters @samp{?}, @samp{+}, instead use the backslashed versions @samp{\?}, @samp{\+}, @samp{\@{}, @samp{\|}, @samp{\(}, and @samp{\)}. -In @sc{egrep} the metacharacter @samp{@{} loses its special meaning; -instead use @samp{\@{}. This not true for @samp{grep -E}. +@cindex interval specifications +Traditional @command{egrep} did not support the @samp{@{} metacharacter, +and some @command{egrep} implementations support @samp{\@{} instead, so +portable scripts should avoid @samp{@{} in @samp{egrep} patterns and +should use @samp{[@{]} to match a literal @samp{@{}. + +@sc{gnu} @command{egrep} attempts to support traditional usage by +assuming that @samp{@{} is not special if it would be the start of an +invalid interval specification. For example, the shell command +@samp{egrep '@{1'} searches for the two-character string @samp{@{1} +instead of reporting a syntax error in the regular expression. +@sc{posix.2} allows this behavior as an extension, but portable scripts +should avoid it. + +@node Usage +@chapter Usage + +@cindex Usage, examples +Here is an example shell command that invokes @sc{gnu} @command{grep}: + +@example +grep -i 'hello.*world' menu.h main.c +@end example + +@noindent +This lists all lines in the files @file{menu.h} and @file{main.c} that +contain the string @samp{hello} followed by the string @samp{world}; +this is because @samp{.*} matches zero or more characters within a line. +@xref{Regular Expressions}. The @samp{-i} option causes @command{grep} +to ignore case, causing it to match the line @samp{Hello, world!}, which +it would not otherwise match. @xref{Invoking}, for more details about +how to invoke @command{grep}. + +@cindex Using @command{grep}, Q&A +@cindex FAQ about @command{grep} usage +Here are some common questions and answers about @command{grep} usage. + +@enumerate + +@item +How can I list just the names of matching files? + +@example +grep -l 'main' *.c +@end example + +@noindent +lists the names of all C files in the current directory whose contents +mention @samp{main}. + +@item +How do I search directories recursively? + +@example +grep -r 'hello' /home/gigi +@end example + +@noindent +searches for @samp{hello} in all files under the directory +@file{/home/gigi}. For more control of which files are searched, use +@command{find}, @command{grep} and @command{xargs}. For example, +the following command searches only C files: + +@smallexample +find /home/gigi -name '*.c' -print | xargs grep 'hello' /dev/null +@end smallexample + +@item +What if a pattern has a leading @samp{-}? + +@example +grep -e '--cut here--' * +@end example + +@noindent +searches for all lines matching @samp{--cut here--}. Without @samp{-e}, +@command{grep} would attempt to parse @samp{--cut here--} as a list of +options. + +@item +Suppose I want to search for a whole word, not a part of a word? + +@example +grep -w 'hello' * +@end example + +@noindent +searches only for instances of @samp{hello} that are entire words; it +does not match @samp{Othello}. For more control, use @samp{\<} and +@samp{\>} to match the start and end of words. For example: + +@example +grep 'hello\>' * +@end example + +@noindent +searches only for words ending in @samp{hello}, so it matches the word +@samp{Othello}. +@item +How do I output context around the matching lines? -@node Reporting Bugs, Concept Index, Regular Expressions, Top -@comment node-name, next, previous, up +@example +grep -C 2 'hello' * +@end example + +@noindent +prints two lines of context around each matching line. + +@item +How do I force grep to print the name of the file? + +Append @file{/dev/null}: + +@example +grep 'eli' /etc/passwd /dev/null +@end example + +@item +Why do people use strange regular expressions on @command{ps} output? + +@example +ps -ef | grep '[c]ron' +@end example + +If the pattern had been written without the square brackets, it would +have matched not only the @command{ps} output line for @command{cron}, +but also the @command{ps} output line for @command{grep}. + +@item +Why does @command{grep} report ``Binary file matches''? + +If @command{grep} listed all matching ``lines'' from a binary file, it +would probably generate output that is not useful, and it might even +muck up your display. So @sc{gnu} @command{grep} suppresses output from +files that appear to be binary files. To force @sc{gnu} @command{grep} +to output lines even from files that appear to be binary, use the +@samp{-a} or @samp{--text} option. + +@item +Why doesn't @samp{grep -lv} print nonmatching file names? + +@samp{grep -lv} lists the names of all files containing one or more +lines that do not match. To list the names of all files that contain no +matching lines, use the @samp{-L} or @samp{--files-without-match} +option. + +@item +I can do @sc{or} with @samp{|}, but what about @sc{and}? + +@example +grep 'paul' /etc/motd | grep 'franc,ois' +@end example + +@noindent +finds all lines that contain both @samp{paul} and @samp{franc,ois}. + +@item +How can I search in both standard input and in files? + +Use the special file name @samp{-}: + +@example +cat /etc/passwd | grep 'alain' - /etc/motd +@end example +@end enumerate + +@node Reporting Bugs @chapter Reporting bugs @cindex Bugs, reporting Email bug reports to @email{bug-gnu-utils@@gnu.org}. Be sure to include the word ``grep'' somewhere in the ``Subject:'' field. -Large repetition counts in the @samp{@{m,n@}} construct may cause -@sc{grep} to use lots of memory. In addition, certain other -obscure regular expressions require exponential time and +Large repetition counts in the @samp{@{m,n@}} construct may cause +@command{grep} to use lots of memory. In addition, certain other +obscure regular expressions require exponential time and space, and may cause grep to run out of memory. -Backreferences are very slow, and may require exponential time. +Backreferences are very slow, and may require exponential time. @page -@node Concept Index , Index, Reporting Bugs, Top -@comment node-name, next, previous, up +@node Concept Index @unnumbered Concept Index This is a general index of all issues discussed in this manual, with the -exception of the @sc{grep} commands and command-line options. +exception of the @command{grep} commands and command-line options. @printindex cp @page -@node Index, , Concept Index, Top +@node Index @unnumbered Index -This is an alphabetical list of all @sc{grep} commands and command-line -options. +This is an alphabetical list of all @command{grep} commands, command-line +options, and environment variables. @printindex fn diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/version.texi b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/version.texi index ace0491..2c6880e 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/version.texi +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/doc/version.texi @@ -1,3 +1,3 @@ -@set UPDATED 10 February 1999 -@set EDITION 2.3 -@set VERSION 2.3 +@set UPDATED 13 November 1999 +@set EDITION 2.4 +@set VERSION 2.4 diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/system.h b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/system.h index be01791..a6966e4 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/system.h +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/system.h @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /* Portability cruft. Include after config.h and sys/types.h. - Copyright (C) 1996, 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + Copyright (C) 1996, 1998, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by @@ -36,6 +36,8 @@ # include <unistd.h> #else # define O_RDONLY 0 +# define SEEK_SET 0 +# define SEEK_CUR 1 int open(), read(), close(); #endif @@ -99,14 +101,19 @@ extern char *sys_errlist[]; #if STAT_MACROS_BROKEN # undef S_ISDIR +# undef S_ISREG #endif #if !defined(S_ISDIR) && defined(S_IFDIR) # define S_ISDIR(Mode) (((Mode) & S_IFMT) == S_IFDIR) #endif +#if !defined(S_ISREG) && defined(S_IFREG) +# define S_ISREG(Mode) (((Mode) & S_IFMT) == S_IFREG) +#endif #ifdef STDC_HEADERS # include <stdlib.h> #else +char *getenv (); ptr_t malloc(), realloc(), calloc(); void free(); #endif @@ -139,11 +146,14 @@ void free(); # undef strrchr # define strrchr rindex # undef memcpy -# define memcpy(d, s, n) bcopy((s), (d), (n)) +# define memcpy(d, s, n) bcopy (s, d, n) #endif #ifndef HAVE_MEMCHR ptr_t memchr(); #endif +#if ! defined HAVE_MEMMOVE && ! defined memmove +# define memmove(d, s, n) bcopy (s, d, n) +#endif #include <ctype.h> diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.awk b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.awk index 3973071..9c9fef8 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.awk +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.awk @@ -8,8 +8,8 @@ BEGIN { $0 ~ /^#/ { next; } NF == 3 { - printf ("echo '%s' | ${GREP} -e '%s' > /dev/null 2>&1\n",$3, $2); - printf ("if test $? -ne %s ; then\n", $1); + printf ("status=`echo '%s' | { ${GREP} -e '%s' > /dev/null 2>&1; echo $?; cat >/dev/null; }`\n",$3, $2); + printf ("if test $status -ne %s ; then\n", $1); printf ("\techo Spencer bre test \\#%d failed\n", ++n); printf ("\tfailures=1\n"); printf ("fi\n"); diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.tests b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.tests index a896377..1ed159d 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.tests +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/bre.tests @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ 2@\(\{1\}a\)@BADRPT@TO CORRECT 0@^*@* 2@^\{1\}@BADRPT@TO CORRECT -2@\{@BADRPT +0@\{@{ 1@a\(b*\)c\1d@abbcbd 1@a\(b*\)c\1d@abbcbbbd 1@^\(.\)\1@abc @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ 2@a\{,\}@BADBR 2@a\{1,x\}@BADBR 2@a\{1,x@EBRACE -2@a\{300\}@BADBR@TO CORRECT +2@a\{32768\}@BADBR 2@a\{1,0\}@BADBR 0@ab\{0,0\}c@abcac 0@ab\{0,1\}c@abcac diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.awk b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.awk index c014fe9..8f6a5b5 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.awk +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.awk @@ -8,8 +8,8 @@ BEGIN { $0 ~ /^#/ { next; } NF == 3 { - printf ("echo '%s' | ${GREP} -E -e '%s' > /dev/null 2>&1\n",$3, $2); - printf ("if test $? -ne %s ; then\n", $1); + printf ("status=`echo '%s' | { ${GREP} -E -e '%s' > /dev/null 2>&1; echo $?; cat >/dev/null; }`\n",$3, $2); + printf ("if test $status -ne %s ; then\n", $1); printf ("\techo Spencer ere test \\#%d failed\n", ++n); printf ("\tfailures=1\n"); printf ("fi\n"); diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.tests b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.tests index 7d37c4e..20ef2b1 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.tests +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/ere.tests @@ -46,37 +46,37 @@ 0@a[bc]d@abd 0@a\*c@a*c 0@a\\b@a\b@TO CORRECT -0@a\\\*b@a\*b +0@a\\\*b@a\*b@SHELL TROUBLE 0@a\bc@abc@TO CORRECT -2@a\@EESCAPE +2@a\@EESCAPE@SHELL TROUBLE 0@a\\bc@a\bc@TO CORRECT 0@a\[b@a[b 2@a[b@EBRACK 0@a$@a 1@a$@a$ -1@a\$@a -0@a\$@a$ +1@a\$@a@SHELL TROUBLE +0@a\$@a$@SHELL TROUBLE 1@a\\$@a -1@a\\$@a$ -1@a\\$@a\$ -0@a\\$@a\ +1@a\\$@a$@SHELL TROUBLE +1@a\\$@a\$@SHELL TROUBLE +0@a\\$@a\@SHEL TROUBLE 0@ab*c@abc 0@ab+c@abc 0@ab?c@abc 0@{@{@TO CORRECT 0@{abc@{abc@TO CORRECT -2@{1@BADRPT +0@{1@{1 2@{1}@BADRPT@TO CORRECT 0@a{b@a{b@TO CORRECT 0@a{1}b@ab 0@a{1,}b@ab 0@a{1,2}b@aab -2@a{1@EBRACE -2@a{1a@EBRACE -2@a{1a}@BADBR +0@a{1@a{1 +1@a{1a@aa +0@a{1a}@a{1a} 0@a{,2}@a{,2} 0@a{,}@a{,} -2@a{1,x}@BADBR +0@a{1,*}@a{1,,,} 2@a{1,x@EBRACE@TO CORRECT 2@a{300}@BADBR@TO CORRECT 2@a{1,0}@BADBR@TO CORRECT diff --git a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/spencer1.awk b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/spencer1.awk index b66b8f5..70c6118 100644 --- a/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/spencer1.awk +++ b/gnu/usr.bin/grep/tests/spencer1.awk @@ -4,8 +4,8 @@ BEGIN { } $0 !~ /^#/ && NF = 3 { - printf ("echo '%s'|${GREP} -E -e '%s' > /dev/null 2>&1\n",$3, $2); - printf ("if test $? -ne %s ; then\n", $1); + printf ("status=`echo '%s'| { ${GREP} -E -e '%s' > /dev/null 2>&1; echo $?; cat >/dev/null; }`\n",$3, $2); + printf ("if test $status -ne %s ; then\n", $1); printf ("\techo Spencer test \\#%d failed\n", ++n); printf ("\tfailures=1\n"); printf ("fi\n"); |