ugrep Genivia Inc.
winget install --id=Genivia.ugrep -e
An ultra-fast, user-friendly grep replacement. Ugrep combines the best features of other grep, adds new things, and surpasses their search speeds. Includes a TUI, boolean queries (AND/OR/NOT), fuzzy search, hexdumps, searches nested archives (cpio/tar/pax/zip), compressed files (zip/gz/Z/bz2/lzma/xz/lz4/zstd), pdfs, docs, and more
ugrep: A Powerful Text Search Tool
ugrep is a high-performance, user-friendly replacement for traditional grep tools. Designed to enhance efficiency and functionality, ugrep not only surpasses conventional search speeds but also offers advanced features that make it an indispensable tool for developers and system administrators alike.
Key Features:
- Interactive TUI: Engage with the Text User Interface (TUI) for real-time querying and navigation.
- Boolean Queries: Utilize AND/OR/NOT operations to refine searches with precision.
- Fuzzy Search: Locate approximate matches using Levenshtein distance, accommodating minor variations in text.
- Archives & Compression Support: Efficiently search within nested archives (zip, tar, cpio) and compressed files (gz, bz2, xz).
- Document Handling: Extract and search content from PDFs, Word documents, and other formats.
Audience & Benefits: Ideal for developers and system administrators requiring efficient text searching across various file types. ugrep delivers ultra-fast performance, comprehensive search capabilities across archives, compressed files, and documents, along with an intuitive interface that boosts productivity. Installation via winget ensures seamless setup on supported systems.
README
The ugrep file pattern searcher
[ README | User Guide | Indexing | Benchmarks | Q&A ]
option -Q opens a query TUI to search files as you type!
Why use ugrep?
-
ugrep is fast, user-friendly, and equipped with a ton of new features that users wanted
-
includes an interactive TUI with built-in help, Google-like search with AND/OR/NOT patterns, fuzzy search, search (nested) zip/7z/tar/pax/cpio archives, tarballs and compressed files gz/Z/bz/bz2/lzma/xz/lz4/zstd/brotli, search and hexdump binary files, search documents such as PDF, doc, docx, and output in JSON, XML, CSV or your own customized format
-
Unicode extended regex pattern syntax with multi-line pattern matching without requiring special command-line options
-
includes a file indexer to speed up searching slow and cold file systems
-
a true drop-in replacement for GNU grep (assuming you copy or symlink
ug
togrep
, and toegrep
and tofgrep
), unlike other popular grep claiming to be "grep alternatives" or "replacements" when those actually implement incompatible command-line options and use an incompatible regex matcher, i.e. Perl regex only versus POSIX BRE (grep) and ERE (egrep) when ugrep supports all regex modes -
benchmarks show that ugrep is (one of) the fastest grep using the high-performance DFA-based regex matcher RE/flex
Development roadmap
if something should be improved or added to ugrep, then let me know!
-
#1 priority is quality assurance to continue to make sure ugrep has no bugs and is reliable
Overview
Commands
-
ug
is for interactive use, which loads an optional .ugrep configuration file with your preferences located in the working directory or home directory,ug+
also searches pdfs, documents, e-books, image metadata -
ugrep
for batch use like GNU grep without a .ugrep configuration file,ugrep+
also searches pdfs, documents, e-books, image metadata
What does ugrep add that GNU grep does not support?
-
Matches Unicode patterns by default and automatically searches UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32 encoded files
-
Matches multiple lines with
\n
or\R
in regex patterns, no special options are required to do so! -
Built-in help:
ug --help
, whereug --help WHAT
displays options related toWHAT
you are looking for💡
ug --help regex
,ug --help globs
,ug --help fuzzy
,ug --help format
. -
User-friendly with customizable configuration files used by the
ug
command intended for interactive use that loads a .ugrep configuration file with your preferencesug PATTERN ... ugrep --config PATTERN ...
💡
ug --save-config ...options-you-want-to-save...
saves a .ugrep config file in the working directory so that the next time you runug
there it uses these options. Do this in your home directory to save a .ugrep config file with options you generally want to use. -
Interactive query TUI, press F1 or CTRL-Z for help and TAB/SHIFT-TAB to navigate to dirs and files
ug -Q ug -Q -e PATTERN
💡
-Q
replacesPATTERN
on the command line to let you enter patterns interactively in the TUI. In the TUI use ALT+letter keys to toggle short "letter options" on/off, for example ALT-n (option-n
) to show/hide line numbers. -
Search the contents of archives (zip, tar, pax, jar, cpio, 7z) and compressed files (gz, Z, bz, bz2, lzma, xz, lz4, zstd, brotli)
ug -z PATTERN ... ug -z --zmax=2 PATTERN ...
💡 specify
-z --zmax=2
to search compressed files and archives nested within archives. The--zmax
argument may range from 1 (default) to 99 for up to 99 decompression and de-archiving steps to search nested archives -
Search with Google-like Boolean query patterns using
-%
patterns withAND
(or just space),OR
(or a bar|
),NOT
(or a dash-
), using quotes to match exactly, and grouping with( )
(shown on the left side below); or with options-e
(as an "or"),--and
,--andnot
, and--not
regex patterns (shown on the right side below):ug -% 'A B C' ... ug -e 'A' --and 'B' --and 'C' ... ug -% 'A|B C' ... ug -e 'A' -e 'B' --and 'C' ... ug -% 'A -B -C' ... ug -e 'A' --andnot 'B' --andnot 'C' ... ug -% 'A -(B|C)'... ug -e 'A' --andnot 'B' --andnot 'C' ... ug -% '"abc" "def"' ... ug -e '\Qabc\E' --and '\Qdef\E' ...
where
A
,B
andC
are arbitrary regex patterns (use option-F
to search strings)💡 specify option
-%%
(--bool --files
) to apply the Boolean query to files as a whole: a file matches if all Boolean conditions are satisfied by matching patterns file-wide. Otherwise, Boolean conditions apply to single lines by default, since grep utilities are generally line-based pattern matchers. Option--stats
displays the query in human-readable form after the search completes. -
Search pdf, doc, docx, e-book, and more with
ug+
using filters associated with filename extensions:ug+ PATTERN ...
or specify
--filter
with a file type to use a filter utility:ug --filter='pdf:pdftotext % -' PATTERN ... ug --filter='doc:antiword %' PATTERN ... ug --filter='odt,docx,epub,rtf:pandoc --wrap=preserve -t plain % -o -' PATTERN ... ug --filter='odt,doc,docx,rtf,xls,xlsx,ppt,pptx:soffice --headless --cat %' PATTERN ... ug --filter='pem:openssl x509 -text,cer,crt,der:openssl x509 -text -inform der' PATTERN ... ug --filter='latin1:iconv -f LATIN1 -t UTF-8' PATTERN ...
💡 the
ug+
command is the same as theug
command, but also uses filters to search PDFs, documents, and image metadata -
Display horizontal context with option
-o
(--only-matching
) and context options-ABC
, e.g. to find matches in very long lines, such as Javascript and JSON sources:ug -o -C20 -nk PATTERN longlines.js
💡
-o -C20
fits all matches with context in 20 characters before and 20 charactess after a match (i.e. 40 Unicode characters total),-nk
outputs line and column numbers. -
Find approximate pattern matches with fuzzy search, within the specified Levenshtein distance
ug -Z PATTERN ... ug -Z3 PATTTERN ...
💡
-Zn
matches up ton
extra, missing or replaced characters,-Z+n
matches up ton
extra characters,-Z-n
matches with up ton
missing characters and-Z~n
matches up ton
replaced characters.-Z
defaults to-Z1
. -
Fzf-like search with regex (or fixed strings with
-F
), fuzzy matching with up to 4 extra characters with-Z+4
and words only with-w
, using-%%
for file-wide Boolean searchesug -Q -%% -l -w -Z+4 --sort=best
💡
-l
lists the matching files in the TUI, pressTAB
thenALT-y
to view a file,SHIFT-TAB
andAlt-l
to go back to view the list of matching files ordered by best match -
Search binary files and display hexdumps with binary pattern matches (Unicode text or
-U
for byte patterns)ug --hexdump -U BYTEPATTERN ... ug --hexdump TEXTPATTERN ... ug -X -U BYTEPATTERN ... ug -X TEXTPATTERN ... ug -W -U BYTEPATTERN ... ug -W TEXTPATTERN ...
💡
--hexdump=4chC1
displays4
columns of hex without a character columnc
, no hex spacingh
, and with one extra hex lineC1
before and after a match. -
Include files to search by file types or file "magic bytes" or exclude them with
^
ug -t TYPE PATTERN ... ug -t ^TYPE PATTERN ... ug -M 'MAGIC' PATTERN ... ug -M '^MAGIC' PATTERN ...
-
Include files and directories to search that match gitignore-style globs or exclude them with
^
ug -g 'FILEGLOB' PATTERN ... ug -g '^FILEGLOB' PATTERN ... ug -g 'DIRGLOB/' PATTERN ... ug -g '^DIRGLOB/' PATTERN ... ug -g 'PATH/FILEGLOB' PATTERN ... ug -g '^PATH/FILEGLOB' PATTERN ... ug -g 'PATH/DIRGLOB/' PATTERN ... ug -g '^PATH/DIRGLOB/' PATTERN ...
-
Include files to search by filename extensions (suffix) or exclude them with
^
, a shorthand for-g"*.EXT"
ug -O EXT PATTERN ... ug -O ^EXT PATTERN ...
-
Include hidden files (dotfiles) and directories to search (omitted by default)
ug -. PATTERN ... ug -g'.*,.*/' PATTERN ...
💡 specify
hidden
in your .ugrep to always search hidden files withug
. -
Exclude files specified by .gitignore etc.
ug --ignore-files PATTERN ... ug --ignore-files=.ignore PATTERN ...
💡 specify
ignore-files
in your .ugrep to always ignore them withug
. Add additionalignore-files=...
as desired. -
Search patterns excluding negative patterns ("match this but not that")
ug -e PATTERN -N NOTPATTERN ... ug -e '[0-9]+' -N 123 ...
-
Use predefined regex patterns to search source code, javascript, XML, JSON, HTML, PHP, markdown, etc.
ug PATTERN -f c++/zap_comments -f c++/zap_strings ... ug PATTERN -f php/zap_html ... ug -f js/functions ... | ug PATTERN ...
-
Sort matching files by name, best match, size, and time
ug --sort PATTERN ... ug --sort=size PATTERN ... ug --sort=changed PATTERN ... ug --sort=created PATTERN ... ug -Z --sort=best PATTERN ... ug --no-sort PATTERN ...
-
Output results in CSV, JSON, XML, and user-specified formats
ug --csv PATTERN ... ug --json PATTERN ... ug --xml PATTERN ... ug --format='file=%f line=%n match=%O%~' PATTERN ...
💡
ug --help format
displays help on format%
fields for customized output. -
Search with PCRE's Perl-compatible regex patterns and display or replace subpattern matches
ug -P PATTERN ... ug -P --format='%1 and %2%~' 'PATTERN(SUB1)(SUB2)' ...
-
Replace patterns in the output with -P and --replace replacement text, optionally containing
%
formatting fields, using-y
to pass the rest of the file through:ug --replace='TEXT' PATTERN ... ug -y --replace='TEXT' PATTERN ... ug --replace='(%m:%o)' PATTERN ... ug -y --replace='(%m:%o)' PATTERN ... ug -P --replace='%1' PATTERN ... ug -y -P --replace='%1' PATTERN ...
💡
ug --help format
displays help on format%
fields to optionally use with--replace
. -
Search files with a specific encoding format such as ISO-8859-1 thru 16, CP 437, CP 850, MACROMAN, KOI8, etc.
ug --encoding=LATIN1 PATTERN ...
Table of contents
- How to install
- Performance comparisons
- Using ugrep within Vim
- Using ugrep within Emacs
- Using ugrep to replace GNU/BSD grep
- Tutorial
- Examples
- Advanced examples
- Displaying helpful info
- Configuration files
- Interactive search with -Q
- Recursively list matching files with -l, -R, -r, --depth, -g, -O, and -t
- Boolean query patterns with -%, -%%, --and, --not
- Search this but not that with -v, -e, -N, -f, -L, -w, -x
- Search non-Unicode files with --encoding
- Matching multiple lines of text
- Displaying match context with -A, -B, -C, and -y
- Searching source code using -f, -O, and -t
- Searching compressed files and archives with -z
- Find files by file signature and shebang "magic bytes" with -M, -O and -t
- Fuzzy search with -Z
- Search hidden files with -.
- Using filter utilities to search documents with --filter
- Searching and displaying binary files with -U, -W, and -X
- Ignore binary files with -I
- Ignoring .gitignore-specified files with --ignore-files
- Using gitignore-style globs to select directories and files to search
- Including or excluding mounted file systems from searches
- Counting the number of matches with -c and -co
- Displaying file, line, column, and byte offset info with -H, -n, -k, -b, and -T
- Displaying colors with --color and paging the output with --pager
- Output matches in JSON, XML, CSV, C++
- Customize output with --format
- Replacing matches with -P --replace and --format using backreferences
- Limiting the number of matches with -1,-2...-9, -K, -m, and --max-files
- Matching empty patterns with -Y
- Case-insensitive matching with -i and -j
- Sort files by name, best match, size, and time
- Tips for advanced users
- More examples
- Man page
- Regex patterns
- Troubleshooting
How to install
MacOS
Install the latest ugrep with Homebrew:
$ brew install ugrep
or install with MacPorts:
$ sudo port install ugrep
This installs the ugrep
and ug
commands, where ug
is the same as ugrep
but also loads the configuration file .ugrep when present in the working
directory or home directory.
Windows
Install with Winget
winget install Genivia.ugrep
Or install with Chocolatey
choco install ugrep
Or install with Scoop scoop install ugrep
Or download the full-featured ugrep.exe
executable as release artifact from
. The zipped release contains the
main ugrep.exe
binary as well as ug.exe
. The ug
command, intended for
interactive use, loads and reads in settings from the .ugrep
configuration
file (when present in the working directory or home directory).
Add ugrep.exe
and ug.exe
to your execution path: go to Settings and
search for "Path" in Find a Setting. Select environment variables ->
Path -> New and add the directory where you placed the ugrep.exe
and
ug.exe
executables.
>[!TIP]
> Practical hints on using ugrep.exe
and ug.exe
on the Windows command line:
>
>- when quoting patterns and arguments on the command line, do not use single
>'
quotes but use "
instead; most Windows command utilities consider
>the single '
quotes part of the command-line argument!
>- file and directory globs are best specified with option -g/GLOB
instead of
>the usual GLOB
command line arguments to select files and directories to
>search, especially for recursive searches;
>- when specifying an empty pattern ""
to match all input, this may be ignored
>by some Windows command interpreters such as Powershell, in that case you
>must specify option --match
instead;
>- to match newlines in patterns, you may want to use \R
instead of \n
to
>match any Unicode newlines, such as \r\n
pairs and single \r
and \n
.
Alpine Linux
$ apk add ugrep ugrep-doc
Check for version info.
Arch Linux
$ pacman -S ugrep
Check for version info.
CentOS
First enable the EPEL repository, then you can install ugrep.
$ dnf install ugrep
Check for version info.
Debian
$ apt-get install ugrep
Check for version info. To build and try
ugrep
locally, see "All platforms" build steps further below.
Fedora
$ dnf install ugrep
Check for version info.
FreeBSD
$ pkg install ugrep
Check for version info.
Haiku
$ pkgman install cmd:ugrep
Check for
version info. To build and try ugrep
locally, see "All platforms" build
steps further below.
NetBSD
You can use the standard NetBSD package installer (pkgsrc):
OpenBSD
$ pkg_add ugrep
Check for version info.
OpenSUSE
$ zypper install ugrep
Check for version info.
RHEL
First enable the EPEL repository, then you can install ugrep.
$ dnf install ugrep
Check for version info.
Other platforms: step 1 download
Clone ugrep
with
$ git clone https://github.com/Genivia/ugrep
Or visit to download a specific release.
Other platforms: step 2 consider optional dependencies
You can always add these later, when you need these features:
-
Option
-P
(Perl regular expressions) requires either the PCRE2 library (recommended) or the Boost.Regex library (optional fallback). If PCRE2 is not installed, install PCRE2 with e.g.sudo apt-get install -y libpcre2-dev
or download PCRE2 and follow the installation instructions. Alternatively, download Boost.Regex and run./bootstrap.sh
andsudo ./b2 --with-regex install
. See Boost: getting started. -
Option
-z
(compressed files and archives search) requires the zlib library installed. It is installed on most systems. If not, install it, e.g. withsudo apt-get install -y libz-dev
. To search.bz
and.bz2
files, install the bzip2 library (recommended), e.g. withsudo apt-get install -y libbz2-dev
. To search.lzma
and.xz
files, install the lzma library (recommended), e.g. withsudo apt-get install -y liblzma-dev
. To search.lz4
files, install the lz4 library (optional, not required), e.g. withsudo apt-get install -y liblz4-dev
. To search.zst
files, install the zstd library (optional, not required), e.g. withsudo apt-get install -y libzstd-dev
. To search.br
files, install the brotli library (optional, not required), e.g. withsudo apt-get install -y libbrotli-dev
. To search.bz3
files, install the bzip3 library (optional, not required), e.g. withsudo apt-get install -y bzip3
.
>[!TIP]
>Even if your system has command line utilities, such as bzip2
, that
>does not necessarily mean that the development libraries such as libbz2
are
>installed. The development libraries should be installed.
>
>Some Linux systems may not be configured to load dynamic libraries from
>/usr/local/lib
, causing a library load error when running ugrep
. To
>correct this, add export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/lib"
>to your ~/.bashrc
file. Or run sudo ldconfig /usr/local/lib
.
Other platforms: step 3 build
Execute the ./build.sh
script to build ugrep
:
$ cd ugrep
$ ./build.sh
This builds the ugrep
executable in the ugrep/src
directory with
./configure
and make -j
, verified with make test
. When all tests pass,
the ugrep
executable is copied to ugrep/bin/ugrep
and the symlink
ugrep/bin/ug -> ugrep/bin/ugrep
is added for the ug
command.
Note that ug
is the same as ugrep
but also loads the configuration file
.ugrep when present in the working directory or home directory. This means
that you can define your default options for ug
in .ugrep.
Alternative paths to installed or local libraries may be specified with
./build.sh
. To get help on the available build options:
$ ./build.sh --help
You can build static executables by specifying:
$ ./build.sh --enable-static
This may fail if libraries don't link statically, such as brotli. In that case
try ./build.sh --enable-static --without-brotli
.
You can build ugrep
with customized defaults enabled, such as a pager:
$ ./build.sh --enable-pager
Options to select defaults for builds include:
--help
display build options--enable-static
build static executables, if possible--enable-hidden
always search hidden files and directories--enable-pager
always use a pager to display output on terminals--enable-pretty
colorize output to terminals and add filename headings--disable-auto-color
disable automatic colors, requires ugrep option--color=auto
to show colors--disable-mmap
disable memory mapped files--disable-sse2
disable SSE2 and AVX optimizations--disable-avx2
disable AVX2 and AVX512BW optimizations, but compile with SSE2 when supported--disable-neon
disable ARM NEON/AArch64 optimizations--with-grep-path
the default-f
path ifGREP_PATH
is not defined--with-grep-colors
the default colors ifGREP_COLORS
is not defined
After the build completes, copy ugrep/bin/ugrep
and ugrep/bin/ug
to a
convenient location, for example in your ~/bin
directory. Or, if you may want
to install the ugrep
and ug
commands and man pages:
$ sudo make install
This also installs the pattern files with predefined patterns for option -f
at /usr/local/share/ugrep/patterns/
. Option -f
first checks the working
directory for the presence of pattern files, if not found checks environment
variable GREP_PATH
to load the pattern files, and if not found reads the
installed predefined pattern files.
Troubleshooting
Git and timestamps
Unfortunately, git clones do not preserve timestamps which means that you may
run into "WARNING: 'aclocal-1.15' is missing on your system." or that
autoheader was not found when running make
.
To work around this problem, run:
$ autoreconf -fi
$ ./build.sh
Compiler warnings
GCC 8 and greater may produce warnings of the sort "note: parameter passing for argument ... changed in GCC 7.1". These warnings should be ignored.
Dockerfile for developers
A Dockerfile is included to build ugrep
in a Ubuntu container.
Developers may want to use sanitizers to verify the ugrep code when making significant changes, for example to detect data races with the ThreadSanitizer:
$ ./build.sh CXXFLAGS='-fsanitize=thread -O1 -g'
We checked ugrep
with the clang AddressSanitizer, MemorySanitizer,
ThreadSanitizer, and UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer. These options incur
significant runtime overhead and should not be used for the final build.
Performance comparisons
Please note that the ugrep and ug commands search binary files by
default and do not ignore .gitignore specified files, which will not make
recursive search performance comparisons meaningful unless options -I
and
--ignore-files
are used. To make these options the default for ug,
simply add ignore-binary
and ignore-files
to your .ugrep configuration
file.
For an up-to-date performance comparison of the latest ugrep, please see the ugrep performance benchmarks. Ugrep is faster than GNU grep, Silver Searcher, ack, sift. Ugrep's speed beats ripgrep in most benchmarks.
Using ugrep within Vim
First, let's define the :grep
command in Vim to search files recursively. To
do so, add the following lines to your .vimrc
located in the root directory:
if executable('ugrep')
set grepprg=ugrep\ -RInk\ -j\ -u\ --tabs=1\ --ignore-files
set grepformat=%f:%l:%c:%m,%f+%l+%c+%m,%-G%f\\\|%l\\\|%c\\\|%m
endif
This specifies -j
case insensitive searches with the Vim :grep
command. For case sensitive searches, remove \ -j
from grepprg
. Multiple
matches on the same line are listed in the quickfix window separately. If this
is not desired, remove \ -u
from grepprg
. With this change, only the first
match on a line is shown. Option --ignore-files
skips files specified in
.gitignore
files, when present. To limit the depth of recursive searches to
the current directory only, append \ -1
to grepprg
.
You can now invoke the Vim :grep
command in Vim to search files on a
specified PATH
for PATTERN
matches:
:grep PATTERN [PATH]
If you omit PATH
, then the working directory is searched. Use %
as PATH
to search only the currently opened file in Vim:
:grep PATTERN %
The :grep
command shows the results in a
quickfix window
that allows you to quickly jump to the matches found.
To open a quickfix window with the latest list of matches:
:copen
Double-click on a line in this window (or select a line and press ENTER) to
jump to the file and location in the file of the match. Enter commands :cn
and :cp
to jump to the next or previous match, respectively. To update the
search results in the quickfix window, just grep them. For example, to
recursively search C++ source code marked FIXME
in the working directory:
:grep -tc++ FIXME
To close the quickfix window:
:cclose
You can use ugrep options with the :grep
command, for example to
select single- and multi-line comments in the current file:
:grep -f c++/comments %
Only the first line of a multi-line comment is shown in quickfix, to save
space. To show all lines of a multi-line match, remove %-G
from
grepformat
.
A popular Vim tool is ctrlp.vim, which is installed with:
$ cd ~/.vim
$ git clone https://github.com/kien/ctrlp.vim.git bundle/ctrlp.vim
CtrlP uses ugrep by adding the following lines to your .vimrc
:
if executable('ugrep')
set runtimepath^=~/.vim/bundle/ctrlp.vim
let g:ctrlp_match_window='bottom,order:ttb'
let g:ctrlp_user_command='ugrep "" %s -Rl -I --ignore-files -3'
endif
where -I
skips binary files, option --ignore-files
skips files specified in
.gitignore
files, when present, and option -3
restricts searching
directories to three levels (the working directory and up to two levels below).
Start Vim then enter the command:
:helptags ~/.vim/bundle/ctrlp.vim/doc
To view the CtrlP documentation in Vim, enter the command:
:help ctrlp.txt
Using ugrep within Emacs
Thanks to Manuel Uberti,
you can now use ugrep in Emacs. To use ugrep instead of GNU grep
within Emacs, add the following line to your .emacs.d/init.el
file:
(setq-default xref-search-program ‘ugrep)
This means that Emacs commands such as project-find-regexp
that rely on
Xref can
now leverage the power of ugrep.
Furthermore, it is possible to use grep
in the Emacs grep
commands.
For instance, you can run lgrep
with ugrep
by customizing grep-template
to something like the following:
(setq-default grep-template "ugrep --color=always -0Iinr -e ")
If you do not have Emacs version 29 (or greater) you can download and build Emacs from the Emacs master branch, or enable Xref integration with ugrep manually:
(with-eval-after-load 'xref
(push '(ugrep . "xargs -0 ugrep --null -ns -e ")
xref-search-program-alist)
(setq-default xref-search-program 'ugrep))
Using ugrep to replace GNU/BSD grep
ugrep supports all standard GNU/BSD grep command-line options and improves many of them too. See notable improvements over grep.
In fact, executing ugrep
with options -U
, -Y
, -.
and --sort
makes it
behave like egrep
, permitting empty patterns to match and search hidden files
instead of ignoring them. See grep equivalence.
-
You can create convenient grep aliases with or without options
-Y
,-.
and--sort
or include other options as desired. If you really must stick exactly to GNU/BSD grep ASCII/LATIN1 patterns, use options-U
and--grep
to disable Unicode pattern matching and to reassign options-z
and-Z
to--null-data
and--null
, respectively. -
You can also create
grep
,egrep
andfgrep
executables by symlinking or copyingugrep
to those names. When theugrep
(orugrep.exe
) executable is copied asgrep
(grep.exe
),egrep
(egrep.exe
),fgrep
(fgrep.exe
), then options-Y
and-.
are automatically enabled together with either-G
forgrep
,-E
foregrep
and-F
forfgrep
. In addition, when copied aszgrep
,zegrep
andzfgrep
, option--decompress
is enabled. For example, whenugrep
is copied aszegrep
, options--decompress
,-E
,-Y
,-.
and--sort
are enabled. -
Likewise, symlinks and hard links can be used to create
grep
,egrep
andfgrep
replacements in the usual installation directories. For example:sudo ln -s `which ugrep` /opt/local/bin/grep sudo ln -s `which ugrep` /opt/local/bin/egrep sudo ln -s `which ugrep` /opt/local/bin/fgrep sudo ln -s `which ugrep` /opt/local/bin/zgrep sudo ln -s `which ugrep` /opt/local/bin/zegrep sudo ln -s `which ugrep` /opt/local/bin/zfgrep
The
/opt/local/bin
here is an example and may or may not be in your$path
and may or may not be found, so please adjust as necessary. Caution: bash does not obey the linked name when executing the program, reverting to the nameugrep
instead, which negates all internal compatibility settings. To avoid this, copy the executables instead of linking!
When linking or copying ugrep
to grep
, egrep
, fgrep
, zgrep
, zegrep
,
zfgrep
, options -z
and -Z
are reassigned for compatibility to GNU/BSD
grep options --null-data
and --null
, respectively.
Equivalence to GNU/BSD grep
When the ugrep
executable file is symlinked or copied to grep
, egrep
,
fgrep
, zgrep
, zegrep
and zfgrep
executables, then those executables
will behave as GNU grep equivalents. This behavior is implicit and automatic,
essentially using the following translations:
grep = ugrep -G -Y -. --sort
egrep = ugrep -E -Y -. --sort
fgrep = ugrep -F -Y -. --sort
zgrep = ugrep -z -G -Y -. --sort
zegrep = ugrep -z -E -Y -. --sort
zfgrep = ugrep -z -F -Y -. --sort
please note that:
-Y
enables empty matches, so for example the patterna*
matches every line instead of a sequence ofa
's. By default in ugrep, the patterna*
matches a sequence ofa
's. Moreover, in ugrep the patterna*b*c*
matches what it is supposed to match by default. See improvements.-.
searches hidden files (dotfiles). By default, hidden files are ignored, like most Unix utilities.--sort
specifies output sorted by pathname, showing sorted matching files first followed by sorted recursive matches in subdirectories. Otherwise, matching files are reported in no particular order to improve performance;- options
-z
and-Z
are reassigned to--null-data
and--null
and no longer enable--decompress
and--fuzzy
searching modes.
There is one minor difference with GNU/BSD grep:
- GNU/BSD grep defaults to
-Dread
and-dread
which are not recommended, see improvements for an explanation.
Short and quick command aliases
Commonly-used aliases to add to .bashrc
to increase productivity:
alias uq = 'ug -Q' # interactive TUI search (uses .ugrep config)
alias uz = 'ug -z' # compressed files and archives search (uses .ugrep config)
alias ux = 'ug -U --hexdump' # binary pattern search (uses .ugrep config)
alias ugit = 'ug -R --ignore-files' # works like git-grep & define your preferences in .ugrep config
alias grep = 'ug -G' # search with basic regular expressions (BRE) like grep
alias egrep = 'ug -E' # search with extended regular expressions (ERE) like egrep
alias fgrep = 'ug -F' # find string(s) like fgrep
alias zgrep = 'ug -zG' # search compressed files and archives with BRE
alias zegrep = 'ug -zE' # search compressed files and archives with ERE
alias zfgrep = 'ug -zF' # find string(s) in compressed files and/or archives
alias xdump = 'ugrep -X ""' # hexdump files without searching (don't use .ugrep config)
alias zmore = 'ugrep+ -z -I -+ --pager ""' # view compressed, archived and regular files (don't use .ugrep config)
Notable improvements over grep
- ugrep starts an interactive query TUI with option
-Q
. - ugrep matches patterns across multiple lines when patterns match
\n
. - ugrep matches full Unicode by default (disabled with option
-U
). - ugrep supports Boolean patterns with AND, OR and NOT (option
--bool
). - ugrep supports gitignore with option
--ignore-files
. - ugrep supports fuzzy (approximate) matching with option
-Z
. - ugrep supports user-defined global and local configuration files.
- ugrep searches compressed files and archives with option
-z
. - ugrep searches cpio, jar, pax, tar, zip and 7z archives with option
-z
. - ugrep searches cpio, jar, pax, tar, zip and 7z archives recursively
stored within archives with
-z
and--zmax=NUM
for up toNUM
levels deep. - ugrep searches pdf, doc, docx, xls, xlsx, epub, and more with
--filter
using third-party format conversion utilities as plugins. - ugrep searches a directory when the FILE argument is a directory, like
most Unix/Linux utilities; use option
-r
to search directories recursively. - ugrep does not match hidden files by default like most Unix/Linux
utilities (hidden dotfile file matching is enabled with
-.
). - ugrep regular expression patterns are more expressive than GNU grep and
BSD grep POSIX ERE and support Unicode pattern matching. Extended regular
expression (ERE) syntax is the default (i.e. option
-E
as egrep, whereas-G
enables BRE). - ugrep spawns threads to search files concurrently to improve search
speed (disabled with option
-J1
). - ugrep produces hexdumps with
-W
(output binary matches in hex with text matches output as usual) and-X
(output all matches in hex). - ugrep can output matches in JSON, XML, CSV and user-defined formats (with
option
--format
). - ugrep option
-f
usesGREP_PATH
environment variable or the predefined patterns installed in/usr/local/share/ugrep/patterns
. If-f
is specified and also one or more-e
patterns are specified, then options-F
,-x
, and-w
do not apply to-f
patterns. This is to avoid confusion when-f
is used with predefined patterns that may no longer work properly with these options. - ugrep options
-O
,-M
, and-t
specify file extensions, file signature magic byte patterns, and predefined file types, respectively. This allows searching for certain types of files in directory trees, for example with recursive search options-R
and-r
. Options-O
,-M
, and-t
also applies to archived files in cpio, jar, pax, tar, zip and 7z files. - ugrep option
-k
,--column-number
to display the column number, taking tab spacing into account by expanding tabs, as specified by option--tabs
. - ugrep option
-P
(Perl regular expressions) supports backreferences (with--format
) and lookbehinds, which uses the PCRE2 or Boost.Regex library for fast Perl regex matching with a PCRE-like syntax. - ugrep option
-b
with option-o
or with option-u
, ugrep displays the exact byte offset of the pattern match instead of the byte offset of the start of the matched line reported by GNU/BSD grep. - ugrep option
-u
,--ungroup
to not group multiple matches per line. This option displays a matched input line again for each additional pattern match on the line. This option is particularly useful with option-c
to report the total number of pattern matches per file instead of the number of lines matched per file. - ugrep option
-Y
enables matching empty patterns. Grepping with empty-matching patterns is weird and gives different results with GNU grep versus BSD grep. Empty matches are not output by ugrep by default, which avoids making mistakes that may produce "random" results. For example, with GNU/BSD grep, patterna*
matches every line in the input, and actually matchesxyz
three times (the empty transitions before and between thex
,y
, andz
). Allowing empty matches requires ugrep option-Y
. Patterns that start with^
or end with$
, such as^\h*$
, match empty. These patterns automatically enable option-Y
. - ugrep option
-D, --devices=ACTION
isskip
by default, instead ofread
. This prevents unexpectedly hanging on named pipes in directories that are recursively searched, as may happen with GNU/BSD grep thatread
devices by default. - ugrep option
-d, --directories=ACTION
isskip
by default, instead ofread
. By default, directories specified on the command line are searched, but not recursively deeper into subdirectories. - ugrep offers negative patterns
-N PATTERN
, which are patterns of the form(?^X)
that skip allX
input, thus removingX
from the search. For example, negative patterns can be used to skip strings and comments when searching for identifiers in source code and find matches that aren't in strings and comments. Predefinedzap
patterns use negative patterns, for example, use-f cpp/zap_comments
to ignore pattern matches in C++ comments. - ugrep ignores the
GREP_OPTIONS
environment variable, because the behavior of ugrep must be portable and predictable on every system. Also GNU grep abandonedGREP_OPTIONS
for this reason. Please use theug
command that loads the .ugrep configuration file located in the working directory or in the home directory when present, or use shell aliases to create new commands with specific search options.
Tutorial
Examples
To perform a search using a configuration file .ugrep
placed in the working
directory or home directory (note that ug
is the same as ugrep --config
):
ug PATTERN FILE...
To save a .ugrep
configuration file to the working directory, then edit this
file in your home directory to customize your preferences for ug
defaults:
ug --save-config
To search the working directory and recursively deeper for main
(note that
-r
recurse symlinks is enabled by default if no file arguments are
specified):
ug main
Same, but only search C++ source code files recursively, ignoring all other files:
ug -tc++ main
Same, using the interactive query TUI, starting with the initial search pattern
main
(note that -Q
with an initial pattern requires option -e
because
patterns are normally specified interactively and all command line arguments
are considered files/directories):
ug -Q -tc++ -e main
To search for #define
(and # define
etc) using a regex pattern in C++ files
(note that patterns should be quoted to prevent shell globbing of *
and ?
):
ug -tc++ '#[\t ]*define'
To search for main
as a word (-w
) recursively without following symlinks
(-r
) in directory myproject
, showing the matching line (-n
) and column
(-k
) numbers next to the lines matched:
ug -r -nkw main myproject
Same, but only search myproject
without recursing deeper (note that directory
arguments are searched at one level by default):
ug -nkw main myproject
Same, but search myproject
and one subdirectory level deeper (two levels)
with -2
:
ug -2 -nkw main myproject
Same, but only search C++ files in myproject
and its subdirectories with
-tc++
:
ug -tc++ -2 -nkw main myproject
Same, but also search inside archives (e.g. zip and tar files) and compressed
files with -z
:
ug -z -tc++ -2 -nkw main myproject
Search recursively the working directory for main
while ignoring gitignored
files (e.g. assuming .gitignore
is in the working directory or below):
ug --ignore-files -tc++ -nkw main
To list all files in the working directory and deeper that are not ignored by
.gitignore
file(s):
ug --ignore-files -l ''
To display the list of file name extensions and "magic bytes" (shebangs)
that are searched corresponding to -t
arguments:
ug -tlist
To list all shell files recursively, based on extensions and shebangs with -l
(note that ''
matches any non-empty file):
ug -l -tShell ''
Advanced examples
To search for main
in source code while ignoring strings and comment blocks
you can use negative patterns with option -N
to skip unwanted matches in
C/C++ quoted strings and comment blocks:
ug -r -nkw -e 'main' -N '"(\\.|\\\r?\n|[^\\\n"])*"|//.*|/\*(.*\n)*?.*\*+\/' myproject
This is a lot of work to type in correctly! If you are like me, I don't want
to spend time fiddling with regex patterns when I am working on something more
important. There is an easier way by using ugrep's predefined patterns
(-f
) that are installed with the ugrep
tool:
ug -r -nkw 'main' -f c/zap_strings -f c/zap_comments myproject
This query also searches through other files than C/C++ source code, like
READMEs, Makefiles, and so on. We're also skipping symlinks with -r
. So
let's refine this query by selecting C/C++ files only using option -tc,c++
and include symlinks to files and directories with -R
:
ug -R -tc,c++ -nkw 'main' -f c/zap_strings -f c/zap_comments myproject
What if you only want to look for the identifier main
but not as a function
main(
? In this case, use a negative pattern for this to skip unwanted
main\h*(
pattern matches:
ug -R -tc,c++ -nkw -e 'main' -N 'main\h*\(' -f c/zap_strings -f c/zap_comments myproject
This uses the -e
and -N
options to explicitly specify a pattern and a
negative pattern, respectively, which is essentially forming the pattern
main|(?^main\h*\()
, where \h
matches space and tab. In general, negative
patterns are useful to filter out pattern matches that we are not interested
in.
As another example, let's say we may want to search for the word FIXME
in
C/C++ comment blocks. To do so we can first select the comment blocks with
ugrep's predefined c/comments
pattern AND THEN select lines with FIXME
using a pipe:
ug -R -tc,c++ -nk -f c/comments myproject | ug -w 'FIXME'
Filtering results with pipes is generally easier than using AND-OR logic that some search tools use. This approach follows the Unix spirit to keep utilities simple and use them in combination for more complex tasks.
Let's produce a sorted list of all identifiers found in Java source code while skipping strings and comments:
ug -R -tjava -f java/names myproject | sort -u
This matches Java Unicode identifiers using the regex
\p{JavaIdentifierStart}\p{JavaIdentifierPart}*
defined in
patterns/java/names
.
With traditional grep and grep-like tools it takes great effort to recursively
search for the C/C++ source file that defines function qsort
, requiring
something like this:
ug -R --include='*.c' --include='*.cpp' '^([ \t]*[[:word:]:*&]+)+[ \t]+qsort[ \t]*\([^;\n]+$' myproject
Fortunately, with ugrep we can simply select all function definitions in
files with extension .c
or .cpp
by using option -Oc,cpp
and by using a
predefined pattern functions
that is installed with the tool to produce
all function definitions. Then we select the one we want:
ug -R -Oc,cpp -nk -f c/functions | ug 'qsort'
Note that we could have used -tc,c++
to select C/C++ files, but this also
includes header files when we want to only search .c
and .cpp
files.
We can also skip files and directories from being searched that are defined in
.gitignore
. To do so we use --ignore-files
to exclude any files and
directories from recursive searches that match the globs in .gitignore
, when
one or more .gitignore
files are found:
ug -R -tc++ --ignore-files -f c++/defines
This searches C++ files (-tc++
) in the working directory for #define
lines (-f c++/defines
), while skipping files and directories declared in
.gitignore
. If you find this too long to type then define an alias to search
GitHub directories:
alias ugit='ugrep -R --ignore-files'
ugit -tc++ -f c++/defines
To highlight matches when pushed through a chain of pipes we should use
--color=always
:
ugit --color=always -tc++ -f c++/defines | ugrep -w 'FOO.*'
This returns a color-highlighted list of all #define FOO...
macros in C/C++
source code files, skipping files defined in .gitignore
.
Note that the complement of --exclude
is not --include
, because exclusions
always take precedence over inclusions, so we cannot reliably list the files
that are ignored with --include-from='.gitignore'
. Only files explicitly
specified with --include
and directories explicitly specified with
--include-dir
are visited. The --include-from
from lists globs that are
considered both files and directories to add to --include
and
--include-dir
, respectively. This means that when directory names and
directory paths are not explicitly listed in this file then it will not be
visited using --include-from
.
Because ugrep checks if the input is valid UTF-encoded Unicode (unless -U
is
used), it is possible to use it as a filter to ignore non-UTF output produced
by a program:
program | ugrep -I ''
If the program produces valid output then the output is passed through,
otherwise the output is filtered out option -I
. If the output is initially
valid for a very large portion but is followed by invalid output, then ugrep
may initially show the output up to but excluding the invalid output after
which further output is blocked.
To filter lines that are valid ASCII or UTF-encoded, while removing lines that are not:
program | ugrep '[\p{Unicode}--[\n]]+'
Note that \p{Unicode}
matches \n
but we don't want to matche the whole
file! Just lines with [\p{Unicode}--[\n]]+
.
Displaying helpful info
The ugrep man page:
man ugrep
To show a help page:
ug --help
To show options that mention WHAT
:
ug --help WHAT
To show a list of -t TYPES
option values:
ug -tlist
In the interactive query TUI, press F1 or CTRL-Z for help and options:
ug -Q
Configuration files
--config[=FILE], ---[FILE]
Use configuration FILE. The default FILE is `.ugrep'. The working
directory is checked first for FILE, then the home directory. The
options specified in the configuration FILE are parsed first,
followed by the remaining options specified on the command line.
The ug command automatically loads a `.ugrep' configuration file,
unless --config=FILE or --no-config is specified.
--no-config
Do not load the default .ugrep configuration file.
--save-config[=FILE] [OPTIONS]
Save configuration FILE to include OPTIONS. Update FILE when
first loaded with --config=FILE. The default FILE is `.ugrep',
which is automatically loaded by the ug command. When FILE is a
`-', writes the configuration to standard output. Only part of the
OPTIONS are saved that do not cause searches to fail when combined
with other options. Additional options may be specified by editing
the saved configuration file. A configuration file may be modified
manually to specify one or more config[=FILE] to indirectly load
the specified FILEs, but recursive config loading is not allowed.
The ug command versus the ugrep command
The ug
command is intended for context-dependent interactive searching and is
equivalent to the ugrep --config
command to load the configuration file
.ugrep
when present in the working directory or, when not found, in the home
directory:
ug PATTERN ...
ugrep --config PATTERN ...
The ug
command also sorts files by name per directory searched. A
configuration file contains NAME=VALUE
pairs per line, where NAME
is the
name of a long option (without --
) and =VALUE
is an argument, which is
optional and may be omitted depending on the option. Empty lines and lines
starting with a #
are ignored:
# Color scheme
colors=cx=hb:ms=hiy:mc=hic:fn=hi+y+K:ln=hg:cn=hg:bn=hg:se=
# Disable searching hidden files and directories
no-hidden
# ignore files specified in .ignore and .gitignore in recursive searches
ignore-files=.ignore
ignore-files=.gitignore
Command line options are parsed in the following order: first the (default or named) configuration file is loaded, then the remaining options and arguments on the command line are parsed.
Option --stats
displays the configuration file used after searching.
Named configuration files
Named configuration files are intended to streamline custom search tasks, by
reducing the number of command line options to just one ---FILE
to use the
collection of options specified in FILE
. The --config=FILE
option and its
abbreviated form ---FILE
load the specified configuration file located in the
working directory or, when not found, located in the home directory:
ug ---FILE PATTERN ...
ugrep ---FILE PATTERN ...
An error is produced when FILE
is not found or cannot be read.
Named configuration files can be used to define a collection of options that
are specific to the requirements of a task in the development workflow of a
project. For example to report unresolved issues by checking the source code
and documentation for comments with FIXME and TODO items. Such named
configuration file can be localized to a project by placing it in the project
directory, or it can be made global by placing it in the home directory. For
visual feedback, a color scheme specific to this task can be specified with
option colors
in the configuration FILE
to help identify the output
produced by a named configuration as opposed to the default configuration.
Saving a configuration file
The --save-config
option saves a .ugrep
configuration file to the working
directory using the current configuration loaded with --config
. This saves
the current configuration combined with additional options when specified also.
Only those options that cannot conflict with other options and options that
cannot negatively impact search results will be saved.
The --save-config=FILE
option saves the configuration to the specified FILE
.
The configuration is written to standard output when FILE
is a -
.
Alternatively, a configuration file may be manually created or modified. A
configuration file may include one or more config[=FILE]
to indirectly load
the specfified FILE
, but recursive config loading is prohibited. The
simplest way to manuall create a configuration file is to specify config
at
the top of the file, followed by the long options to override the defaults.
Interactive search with -Q
-Q[=DELAY], --query[=DELAY]
Query mode: start a TUI to perform interactive searches. This mode
requires an ANSI capable terminal. An optional DELAY argument may
be specified to reduce or increase the response time to execute
searches after the last key press, in increments of 100ms, where
the default is 3 (300ms delay). No whitespace may be given between
-Q and its argument DELAY. Initial patterns may be specified with
-e PATTERN, i.e. a PATTERN argument requires option -e. Press F1
or CTRL-Z to view the help screen. Press F2 or CTRL-Y to invoke a
command to view or edit the file shown at the top of the screen.
The command can be specified with option --view, or defaults to
environment variable PAGER when defined, or EDITOR. Press Tab and
Shift-Tab to navigate directories and to select a file to search.
Press Enter to select lines to output. Press ALT-l for option -l
to list files, ALT-n for -n, etc. Non-option commands include
ALT-] to increase context. See also options --no-confirm, --delay,
--split and --view.
--no-confirm
Do not confirm actions in -Q query TUI. The default is confirm.
--delay=DELAY
Set the default -Q key response delay. Default is 3 for 300ms.
--split
Split the -Q query TUI screen on startup.
--view[=COMMAND]
Use COMMAND to view/edit a file in -Q query TUI by pressing CTRL-Y.
This option starts a user interface to enter search patterns interactively:
- Press F1 or CTRL-Z to view a help screen and to enable or disable options.
- Press Alt with a key corresponding to a ugrep option letter or digit to
enable or disable the ugrep option. For example, pressing Alt-c enables
option
-c
to count matches. Pressing Alt-c again disables-c
. Options can be toggled with the Alt key while searching or when viewing the help screen. If Alt/Meta keys are not working (e.g. X11 xterm), then press CTRL-O followed by the key corresponding to the option. Alt keys may work in xterm by addingxterm*metaSendsEscape: true
to ~/.Xdefaults`. - Press Alt-g to enter or edit option
-g
file and directory matching globs, a comma-separated list of gitignore-style glob patterns. Presssing ESC returns control to the query pattern prompt (the globs are saved). When a glob is preceded by a!
or a^
, skips files whose name matches the glob When a glob contains a/
, full pathnames are matched. Otherwise basenames are matched. When a glob ends with a/
, directories are matched. - The query TUI prompt switches between
Q>
(normal),F>
(fixed strings),G>
(basic regex),P>
(Perl matching), andZ>
(fuzzy matching). When the--glob=
prompt is shown, a comma-separated list of gitignore-style glob patterns may be entered. Presssing ESC returns control to the pattern prompt. - Press CTRL-T to split the TUI screen to preview a file in the bottom pane.
- Press CTRL-Y to view a file with a pager specified with
--view
. - Press Enter to switch to selection mode to select lines to output when ugrep exits. Normally, ugrep in query mode does not output any results unless results are selected. While in selection mode, select or deselect lines with Enter or Del, or press A to select all results.
- The file listed or shown at the top of the screen, or beneath the cursor in
selection mode, is edited by pressing F2 or CTRL-Y. A file viewer or editor
may be specified with
--view=COMMAND
. Otherwise, thePAGER
orEDITOR
environment variables are used to invoke the command with CTRL-Y. Filenames must be enabled and visible in the output to use this feature. - Press TAB to chdir one level down into the directory of the file listed or viewed at the top of the screen. If no directory exists, the file itself is selected to search. Press Shift-TAB to go back up one level.
- Press CTRL-] to toggle colors on and off. Normally ugrep in query mode uses
colors and other markup to highlight results. When colors are turned off,
selected results are also not colored in the output produced by ugrep when
ugrep exits. When colors are turned on (the default), selected results are
colored depending on the
--color
option. - The query engine is optimized to limit system load by performing on-demand searches to produce results only for the visible parts shown in the interface. That is, results are shown on demand, when scrolling down and when exiting when all results are selected. When the search pattern is modified, the previous search query is cancelled when incomplete. This effectively limits the load on the system to maintain a high degree of responsiveness of the query engine to user input. Because the search results are produced on demand, occasionally you may notice a flashing "Searching..." message when searching files.
- To display results faster, specify a low
DELAY
value such as 1. However, lower values may increase system load as a result of repeatedly initiating and cancelling searches by each key pressed. - To avoid long pathnames to obscure the view,
--heading
is enabled by default. Press Alt-+ to switch headings off.
Query TUI key mapping:
key(s) | function |
---|---|
Alt-key | toggle ugrep command-line option corresponding to key |
Alt-/ xxxx/ | insert Unicode hex code point U+xxxx |
Esc Ctrl-C | go back or exit |
Ctrl-Q | quick exit and output the results selected in selection mode |
Tab | chdir to the directory of the file shown at the top of the screen or select file |
Shift-Tab | chdir one level up or deselect file |
Enter | enter selection mode and toggle selected lines to output on exit |
Up Ctrl-P | move up |
Down Ctrl-N | move down |
Left Ctrl-B | move left |
Right Ctrl-F | move right |
PgUp Ctrl-G | move display up by a page |
PgDn Ctrl-D | move display down by a page |
Alt-Up | move display up by 1/2 page (MacOS Shift-Up ) |
Alt-Down | move display down by 1/2 page (MacOS Shift-Down ) |
Alt-Left | move display left by 1/2 page (MacOS Shift-Left ) |
Alt-Right | move display right by 1/2 page (MacOS Shift-Right ) |
Home Ctrl-A | move cursor to the beginning of the line |
End Ctrl-E | move cursor to the end of the line |
Ctrl-K | delete after cursor |
Ctrl-L | refresh screen |
Ctrl-O +key | toggle ugrep command-line option corresponding to key , same as Alt-key |
Ctrl-R F4 | jump to bookmark |
Ctrl-S | jump to the next dir/file/context |
Ctrl-T F5 | toggle split screen (--split starts a split-screen TUI) |
Ctrl-U | delete before cursor |
Ctrl-V | verbatim character |
Ctrl-W | jump back one dir/file/context |
Ctrl-X F3 | set bookmark |
Ctrl-Y F2 | view or edit the file shown at the top of the screen |
Ctrl-Z F1 | view help and options |
Ctrl-^ | chdir back to the starting working directory |
Ctrl-] | toggle color/mono |
Ctrl-\ | terminate process |
To interactively search the files in the working directory and below:
ug -Q
Same, but restricted to C++ files only and ignoring .gitignore
files:
ug -Q -tc++ --ignore-files
To interactively search all makefiles in the working directory and below:
ug -Q -g 'Makefile*' -g 'makefile*'
Same, but for up to 2 directory levels (working and one subdirectory level):
ug -Q -2 -g 'Makefile*' -g 'makefile*'
To interactively view the contents of main.cpp
and search it, where -y
shows any nonmatching lines as context:
ug -Q -y main.cpp
To interactively search main.cpp
, starting with the search pattern TODO
and
a match context of 5 lines (context can be interactively enabled and disabled,
this also overrides the default context size of 2 lines):
ug -Q -C5 -e TODO main.cpp
To view and search the contents of an archive (e.g. zip, tarball):
ug -Q -z archive.tar.gz
To interactively select files from project.zip
to decompress with unzip
,
using ugrep query selection mode (press Enter to select lines):
unzip project.zip `zipinfo -1 project.zip | ugrep -Q`
Recursively list matching files with -l, -R, -r, -S, --depth, -g, -O, and -t
-L, --files-without-match
Only the names of files not containing selected lines are written
to standard output. Pathnames are listed once per file searched.
If the standard input is searched, the string ``(standard input)''
is written.
-l, --files-with-matches
Only the names of files containing selected lines are written to
standard output. ugrep will only search a file until a match has
been found, making searches potentially less expensive. Pathnames
are listed once per file searched. If the standard input is
searched, the string ``(standard input)'' is written.
-R, --dereference-recursive
Recursively read all files under each directory. Follow all
symbolic links to files and directories, unlike -r.
-r, --recursive
Recursively read all files under each directory, following symbolic
links only if they are on the command line. Note that when no FILE
arguments are specified and input is read from a terminal,
recursive searches are performed as if -r is specified.
-S, --dereference-files
When -r is specified, symbolic links to files are followed, but not
to directories. The default is not to follow symbolic links.
--depth=[MIN,][MAX], -1, -2, -3, ... -9, -10, -11, -12, ...
Restrict recursive searches from MIN to MAX directory levels deep,
where -1 (--depth=1) searches the specified path without recursing
into subdirectories. Note that -3 -5, -3-5, and -35 search 3 to 5
levels deep. Enables -r if -R or -r is not specified.
-g GLOBS, --glob=GLOBS
Search only files whose name matches the specified comma-separated
list of GLOBS, same as --include='glob' for each `glob' in GLOBS.
When a `glob' is preceded by a `!' or a `^', skip files whose name
matches `glob', same as --exclude='glob'. When `glob' contains a
`/', full pathnames are matched. Otherwise basenames are matched.
When `glob' ends with a `/', directories are matched, same as
--include-dir='glob' and --exclude-dir='glob'. A leading `/'
matches the working directory. This option may be repeated and may
be combined with options -M, -O and -t to expand searches. See
`ugrep --help globs' and `man ugrep' section GLOBBING for details.
-O EXTENSIONS, --file-extension=EXTENSIONS
Search only files whose filename extensions match the specified
comma-separated list of EXTENSIONS, same as --include='*.ext' for
each `ext' in EXTENSIONS. When `ext' is preceded by a `!' or a
`^', skip files whose filename extensions matches `ext', same as
--exclude='*.ext'. This option may be repeated and may be combined
with options -g, -M and -t to expand the recursive search.
-t TYPES, --file-type=TYPES
Search only files associated with TYPES, a comma-separated list of
file types. Each file type corresponds to a set of filename
extensions passed to option -O and filenames passed to option -g.
For capitalized file types, the search is expanded to include files
with matching file signature magic bytes, as if passed to option
-M. When a type is preceded by a `!' or a `^', excludes files of
the specified type. This option may be repeated.
--stats
Output statistics on the number of files and directories searched,
and the inclusion and exclusion constraints applied.
If no FILE arguments are specified and input is read from a terminal, recursive
searches are performed as if -r
is specified. To force reading from standard
input, specify -
as the FILE argument.
To recursively list all non-empty files in the working directory:
ug -r -l ''
To list all non-empty files in the working directory but not deeper (since a
FILE argument is given, in this case .
for the working directory):
ug -l '' .
To list all non-empty files in directory mydir
but not deeper (since a FILE
argument is given):
ug -l '' mydir
To list all non-empty files in directory mydir
and deeper while following
symlinks:
ug -R -l '' mydir
To recursively list all non-empty files on the path specified, while visiting
subdirectories only, i.e. directories mydir/
and subdirectories at one
level deeper mydir/*/
are visited (note that -2 -l
can be abbreviated to
-l2
):
ug -2 -l '' mydir
To recursively list all non-empty files in directory mydir
, not following any
symbolic links (except when on the command line such as mydir
):
ug -rl '' mydir
To recursively list all Makefiles matching the text CPP
:
ug -l -tmake 'CPP'
To recursively list all Makefile.*
matching bin_PROGRAMS
:
ug -l -g'Makefile.*' 'bin_PROGRAMS'
To recursively list all non-empty files with extension .sh, with -Osh
:
ug -l -Osh ''
To recursively list all shell scripts based on extensions and shebangs with
-tShell
:
ug -l -tShell ''
To recursively list all shell scripts based on extensions only with -tshell
:
ug -l -tshell ''
Boolean query patterns with -%, -%%, --and, --not
--bool, -%, -%%
Specifies Boolean query patterns. A Boolean query pattern is
composed of `AND', `OR', `NOT' operators and grouping with `(' `)'.
Spacing between subpatterns is the same as `AND', `|' is the same
as `OR' and a `-' is the same as `NOT'. The `OR' operator binds
more tightly than `AND'. For example, --bool 'A|B C|D' matches
lines with (`A' or `B') and (`C' or `D'), --bool 'A -B' matches
lines with `A' and not `B'. Operators `AND', `OR', `NOT' require
proper spacing. For example, --bool 'A OR B AND C OR D' matches
lines with (`A' or `B') and (`C' or `D'), --bool 'A AND NOT B'
matches lines with `A' without `B'. Quoted subpatterns are matched
literally as strings. For example, --bool 'A "AND"|"OR"' matches
lines with `A' and also either `AND' or `OR'. Parentheses are used
for grouping. For example, --bool '(A B)|C' matches lines with `A'
and `B', or lines with `C'. Note that all subpatterns in a Boolean
query pattern are regular expressions, unless -F is specified.
Options -E, -F, -G, -P and -Z can be combined with --bool to match
subpatterns as strings or regular expressions (-E is the default.)
This option does not apply to -f FILE patterns. The double short
option -%% enables options --bool --files. Option --stats displays
the Boolean search patterns applied. See also options --and,
--andnot, --not, --files and --lines.
--files
Boolean file matching mode, the opposite of --lines. When combined
with option --bool, matches a file if all Boolean conditions are
satisfied. For example, --bool --files 'A B|C -D' matches a file
if some lines match `A', and some lines match either `B' or `C',
and no line matches `D'. See also options --and, --andnot, --not,
--bool and --lines. The double short option -%% enables options
--bool --files.
--lines
Boolean line matching mode for option --bool, the default mode.
--and [[-e] PATTERN] ... -e PATTERN
Specify additional patterns to match. Patterns must be specified
with -e. Each -e PATTERN following this option is considered an
alternative pattern to match, i.e. each -e is interpreted as an OR
pattern. For example, -e A -e B --and -e C -e D matches lines with
(`A' or `B') and (`C' or `D'). Note that multiple -e PATTERN are
alternations that bind more tightly together than --and. Option
--stats displays the search patterns applied. See also options
--not, --andnot, and --bool.
--andnot [[-e] PATTERN] ...
Combines --and --not. See also options --and, --not, and --bool.
--not [-e] PATTERN
Specifies that PATTERN should not match. Note that -e A --not -e B
matches lines with `A' or lines without a `B'. To match lines with
`A' that have no `B', specify -e A --andnot -e B. Option --stats
displays the search patterns applied. See also options --and,
--andnot, and --bool.
--stats
Output statistics on the number of files and directories searched,
and the inclusion and exclusion constraints applied.
Note that the --and
, --not
, and --andnot
options require -e PATTERN
.
The -%
option makes all patterns Boolean-based, supporting the following
logical operations listed from the highest level of precedence to the lowest:
operator | alternative | result |
---|---|---|
"x" | match x literally and exactly as specified (using the standard regex escapes \Q and \E ) | |
( ) | Boolean expression grouping | |
-x | NOT x | inverted match, i.e. matches if x does not match |
x|y | x OR y | matches lines with x or y |
x y | x AND y | matches lines with both x and y |
-
x
andy
are subpatterns that do not start with the special symbols|
,-
, and(
(use quotes or a\
escape to match these); -
-
andNOT
are the same and take precedence overOR
, which means that-x|y
==(-x)|y
for example. -
|
andOR
are the same and take precedence overAND
, which means thatx y|z
==x (y|z)
for example;
The --stats
option displays the Boolean queries in human-readable form
converted to CNF (Conjunctive Normal Form), after the search is completed.
To show the CNF without a search, read from standard input terminated by an
EOF, like echo | ugrep -% '...' --stats
.
Subpatterns are color-highlighted in the output, except those negated with
NOT
(a NOT
subpattern may still show up in a matching line when using an
OR-NOT pattern like x|-y
). Note that subpatterns may overlap. In that
case only the first matching subpattern is color-highlighted.
Multiple lines may be matched when subpatterns match newlines. There is one
exception however: subpatterns ending with (?=X)
lookaheads may not match
when X
spans multiple lines.
Empty patterns match any line (grep standard). Therefore, -% 'x|""|y'
matches everything and x
and y
are not color-highlighted. Option -y
should be used to show every line as context, for example -y 'x|y'
.
Fzf-like interactive querying (Boolean search with fixed strings with fuzzy
matching to allow e.g. up to 4 extra characters matched with -Z+4
in words
with -w
), press TAB and ALT-y to view a file with matches. Press SHIFT-TAB
and ALT-l to go back to the list of matching files:
ug -Q -%% -l -w -F -Z+4 --sort=best
To recursively find all files containing both hot
and dog
anywhere in the
file with option --files
:
ug -%% 'hot dog'
ug --files -e hot --and dog
To find lines containing both hot
and dog
in myfile.txt
:
ug -% 'hot dog' myfile.txt
ug -e hot --and dog myfile.txt
To find lines containing place
and then also hotdog
or taco
(or both) in
myfile.txt
:
ug -% 'hotdog|taco place' myfile.txt
ug -e hotdog -e taco --and place myfile.txt
Same, but exclude lines matching diner
:
ug -% 'hotdog|taco place -diner' myfile.txt
ug -e hotdog -e taco --and place --andnot diner myfile.txt
To find lines with diner
or lines that match both fast
and food
but not bad
in myfile.txt
:
ug -% 'diner|(fast food -bad)' myfile.txt
To find lines with fast food
(exactly) or lines with diner
but not bad
or old
in myfile.txt
:
ug -% '"fast food"|diner -bad -old' myfile.txt
Same, but using a different Boolean expression that has the same meaning:
ug -% '"fast food"|diner -(bad|old)' myfile.txt
To find lines with diner
implying good
in myfile.txt
(that is, show lines
with good
without diner
and show lines with diner
but only those with
good
, which is logically implied!):
ug -% 'good|-diner' myfile.txt
ug -e good --not diner myfile.txt
To find lines with foo
and -bar
and "baz"
in myfile.txt
(not that -
and "
should be matched using \
escapes and with --and -e -bar
):
ug -% 'foo \-bar \"baz\"' myfile.txt
ug -e foo --and -e -bar --and '"baz"' myfile.txt
To search myfile.cpp
for lines with TODO
or FIXME
but not both on the
same line, like XOR:
ug -% 'TODO|FIXME -(TODO FIXME)' myfile.cpp
ug -e TODO -e FIXME --and --not TODO --not FIXME myfile.cpp
Search this but not that with -v, -e, -N, -f, -L, -w, -x
-e PATTERN, --regexp=PATTERN
Specify a PATTERN to search the input. An input line is selected
if it matches any of the specified patterns. This option is useful
when multiple -e options are used to specify multiple patterns, or
when a pattern begins with a dash (`-'), or to specify a pattern
after option -f or after the FILE arguments.
-f FILE, --file=FILE
Read newline-separated patterns from FILE. White space in patterns
is significant. Empty lines in FILE are ignored. If FILE does not
exist, the GREP_PATH environment variable is used as path to FILE.
If that fails, looks for FILE in /usr/local/share/ugrep/pattern.
When FILE is a `-', standard input is read. This option may be
repeated.
-L, --files-without-match
Only the names of files not containing selected lines are written
to standard output. Pathnames are listed once per file searched.
If the standard input is searched, the string ``(standard input)''
is written.
-N PATTERN, --neg-regexp=PATTERN
Specify a negative PATTERN to reject specific -e PATTERN matches
with a counter pattern. Note that longer patterns take precedence
over shorter patterns, i.e. a negative pattern must be of the same
length or longer to reject matching patterns. Option -N cannot be
specified with -P. This option may be repeated.
-v, --invert-match
Selected lines are those not matching any of the specified
patterns.
-w, --word-regexp
The PATTERN is searched for as a word, such that the matching text
is preceded by a non-word character and is followed by a non-word
character. Word-like characters are Unicode letters, digits and
connector punctuations such as underscore.
-x, --line-regexp
Select only those matches that exactly match the whole line, as if
the patterns are surrounded by ^ and $.
See also Boolean query patterns with -%, -%%, --and, --not for more powerful Boolean query options than the traditional GNU/BSD grep options.
To display lines in file myfile.sh
but not lines matching ^[ \t]*#
:
ug -v '^[ \t]*#' myfile.sh
To search myfile.cpp
for lines with FIXME
and urgent
, but not Scotty
:
ugrep FIXME myfile.cpp | ugrep urgent | ugrep -v Scotty
Same, but using -%
for Boolean queries:
ug -% 'FIXME urgent -Scotty' myfile.cpp
To search for decimals using pattern \d+
that do not start with 0
using
negative pattern 0\d+
and excluding 555
:
ug -e '\d+' -N '0\d+' -N 555 myfile.cpp
To search for words starting with disp
without matching display
in file
myfile.py
by using a "negative pattern" -N '/'
where -N
specifies an additional negative pattern to skip matches:
ug -e '\' myfile.py
To search for lines with the word display
in file myfile.py
skipping this
word in strings and comments, where -f
specifies patterns in files which are
predefined patterns in this case:
ug -n -w 'display' -f python/zap_strings -f python/zap_comments myfile.py
To display lines that are not blank lines:
ug -x -e '.*' -N '\h*' myfile.py
Same, but using -v
and -x
with \h*
, i.e. pattern ^\h*$
:
ug -v -x '\h*' myfile.py
To recursively list all Python files that do not contain the word display
,
allowing the word to occur in strings and comments:
ug -RL -tPython -w 'display' -f python/zap_strings -f python/zap_comments
Search non-Unicode files with --encoding
--encoding=ENCODING
The encoding format of the input. The default ENCODING is binary
and UTF-8 which are the same. Note that option -U specifies binary
PATTERN matching (text matching is the default.)
Binary, ASCII and UTF-8 files do not require this option to search them. Also
UTF-16 and UTF-32 files do not require this option to search them, assuming
that UTF-16 and UTF-32 files start with a UTF BOM
(byte order mark) as usual.
Other file encodings require option --encoding=ENCODING
:
encoding | parameter |
---|---|
ASCII | n/a |
UTF-8 | n/a |
UTF-16 with BOM | n/a |
UTF-32 with BOM | n/a |
UTF-16 BE w/o BOM | UTF-16 or UTF-16BE |
UTF-16 LE w/o BOM | UTF-16LE |
UTF-32 w/o BOM | UTF-32 or UTF-32BE |
UTF-32 w/o BOM | UTF-32LE |
Latin-1 | LATIN1 or ISO-8859-1 |
ISO-8859-1 | ISO-8859-1 |
ISO-8859-2 | ISO-8859-2 |
ISO-8859-3 | ISO-8859-3 |
ISO-8859-4 | ISO-8859-4 |
ISO-8859-5 | ISO-8859-5 |
ISO-8859-6 | ISO-8859-6 |
ISO-8859-7 | ISO-8859-7 |
ISO-8859-8 | ISO-8859-8 |
ISO-8859-9 | ISO-8859-9 |
ISO-8859-10 | ISO-8859-10 |
ISO-8859-11 | ISO-8859-11 |
ISO-8859-13 | ISO-8859-13 |
ISO-8859-14 | ISO-8859-14 |
ISO-8859-15 | ISO-8859-15 |
ISO-8859-16 | ISO-8859-16 |
MAC (CR=newline) | MAC |
MacRoman (CR=newline) | MACROMAN |
EBCDIC | EBCDIC |
DOS code page 437 | CP437 |
DOS code page 850 | CP850 |
DOS code page 858 | CP858 |
Windows code page 1250 | CP1250 |
Windows code page 1251 | CP1251 |
Windows code page 1252 | CP1252 |
Windows code page 1253 | CP1253 |
Windows code page 1254 | CP1254 |
Windows code page 1255 | CP1255 |
Windows code page 1256 | CP1256 |
Windows code page 1257 | CP1257 |
Windows code page 1258 | CP1258 |
KOI8-R | KOI8-R |
KOI8-U | KOI8-U |
KOI8-RU | KOI8-RU |
Note that regex patterns are always specified in UTF-8 (includes ASCII). To search binary files with binary patterns, see searching and displaying binary files with -U, -W, and -X.
To recursively list all files that are ASCII (i.e. 7-bit):
ug -L '[^[:ascii:]]'
To recursively list all files that are non-ASCII, i.e. UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32 files with non-ASCII Unicode characters (U+0080 and up):
ug -l '[^[:ascii:]]'
To check if a file contains non-ASCII Unicode (U+0080 and up):
ug -q '[^[:ascii:]]' myfile && echo "contains Unicode"
To remove invalid Unicode characters from a file (note that -o
may not work
because binary data is detected and rejected and newlines are added, but
--format="%o%
does not check for binary and copies the match "as is"):
ug "[\p{Unicode}\n]" --format="%o" badfile.txt
To recursively list files with invalid UTF content (i.e. invalid UTF-8 byte
sequences or files that contain any UTF-8/16/32 code points that are outside
the valid Unicode range) by matching any code point with .
and by using a
negative pattern -N '\p{Unicode}'
to ignore each valid Unicode character:
ug -l -e '.' -N '\p{Unicode}'
To display lines containing laughing face emojis:
ug '[😀-😏]' emojis.txt
The same results are obtained using \x{hhhh}
to select a Unicode character
range:
ug '[\x{1F600}-\x{1F60F}]' emojis.txt
To display lines containing the names Gödel (or Goedel), Escher, or Bach:
ug 'G(ö|oe)del|Escher|Bach' GEB.txt wiki.txt
To search for lorem
in lower or upper case in a UTF-16 file that is marked
with a UTF-16 BOM:
ug -iw 'lorem' utf16lorem.txt
To search utf16lorem.txt when this file has no UTF-16 BOM, using --encoding
:
ug --encoding=UTF-16 -iw 'lorem' utf16lorem.txt
To search file spanish-iso.txt
encoded in ISO-8859-1:
ug --encoding=ISO-8859-1 -w 'año' spanish-iso.txt
Matching multiple lines of text
-o, --only-matching
Output only the matching part of lines. If -A, -B or -C is
specified, fits the match and its context on a line within the
specified number of columns.
Multiple lines may be matched by patterns that match newline characters. Use
option -o
to output the match only, not the full lines(s) that match.
To match a \n
line break, include \n
in the pattern to match the LF
character. If you want to match \r\n
and \n
line breaks, use \r?\n
or
simply use \R
to match any Unicode line break \r\n
, \r
, \v
, \f
, \n
,
U+0085, U+2028 and U+2029.
To match C/C++ /*...*/
multi-line comments:
ug '/\*(.*\n)*?.*\*+\/' myfile.cpp
To match C/C++ comments using the predefined c/comments
patterns with
-f c/comments
, restricted to the matching part only with option -o
:
ug -of c/comments myfile.cpp
Same as sed -n '/begin/,/end/p'
: to match all lines between a line containing
begin
and the first line after that containing end
, using lazy repetition:
ug -o '.*begin(.|\n)*?end.*' myfile.txt
Displaying match context with -A, -B, -C, -y, and --width
-A NUM, --after-context=NUM
Output NUM lines of trailing context after matching lines. Places
a --group-separator between contiguous groups of matches. If -o is
specified, output the match with context to fit NUM columns after
the match or shortens the match. See also options -B, -C and -y.
-B NUM, --before-context=NUM
Output NUM lines of leading context before matching lines. Places
a --group-separator between contiguous groups of matches. If -o is
specified, output the match with context to fit NUM columns before
the match or shortens the match. See also options -A, -C and -y.
-C NUM, --context=NUM
Output NUM lines of leading and trailing context surrounding each
matching line. Places a --group-separator between contiguous
groups of matches. If -o is specified, output the match with
context to fit NUM columns before and after the match or shortens
the match. See also options -A, -B and -y.
-y, --any-line
Any line is output (passthru). Non-matching lines are output as
context with a `-' separator. See also options -A, -B, and -C.
--width[=NUM]
Truncate the output to NUM visible characters per line. The width
of the terminal window is used if NUM is not specified. Note that
double wide characters in the output may result in wider lines.
-o, --only-matching
Output only the matching part of lines. If -A, -B or -C is
specified, fits the match and its context on a line within the
specified number of columns.
To display two lines of context before and after a matching line:
ug -C2 'FIXME' myfile.cpp
To show three lines of context after a matched line:
ug -A3 'FIXME.*' myfile.cpp:
To display one line of context before each matching line with a C function definition (C names are non-Unicode):
ug -B1 -f c/functions myfile.c
To display one line of context before each matching line with a C++ function definition (C++ names may be Unicode):
ug -B1 -f c++/functions myfile.cpp
To display any non-matching lines as context for matching lines with -y
:
ug -y -f c++/functions myfile.cpp
To display a hexdump of a matching line with one line of hexdump context:
ug -C1 -UX '\xaa\xbb\xcc' a.out
Context within a line is displayed with option -o
with a context option:
ug -o -C20 'pattern' myfile.cpp
Same, but with pretty output with headings, line numbers and column numbers
(-k
) and showing context:
ug --pretty -oC20 'pattern' myfile.cpp
Searching source code using -f, -g, -O, and -t
-f FILE, --file=FILE
Read newline-separated patterns from FILE. White space in patterns
is significant. Empty lines in FILE are ignored. If FILE does not
exist, the GREP_PATH environment variable is used as path to FILE.
If that fails, looks for FILE in /usr/local/share/ugrep/pattern.
When FILE is a `-', standard input is read. This option may be
repeated.
--ignore-files[=FILE]
Ignore files and directories matching the globs in each FILE that
is encountered in recursive searches. The default FILE is
`.gitignore'. Matching files and directories located in the
directory of the FILE and in subdirectories below are ignored.
Globbing syntax is the same as the --exclude-from=FILE gitignore
syntax, but files and directories are excluded instead of only
files. Directories are specifically excluded when the glob ends in
a `/'. Files and directories explicitly specified as command line
arguments are never ignored. This option may be repeated to
specify additional files.
-g GLOBS, --glob=GLOBS
Search only files whose name matches the specified comma-separated
list of GLOBS, same as --include='glob' for each `glob' in GLOBS.
When a `glob' is preceded by a `!' or a `^', skip files whose name
matches `glob', same as --exclude='glob'. When `glob' contains a
`/', full pathnames are matched. Otherwise basenames are matched.
When `glob' ends with a `/', directories are matched, same as
--include-dir='glob' and --exclude-dir='glob'. A leading `/'
matches the working directory. This option may be repeated and may
be combined with options -M, -O and -t to expand searches. See
`ugrep --help globs' and `man ugrep' section GLOBBING for details.
-O EXTENSIONS, --file-extension=EXTENSIONS
Search only files whose filename extensions match the specified
comma-separated list of EXTENSIONS, same as --include='*.ext' for
each `ext' in EXTENSIONS. When `ext' is preceded by a `!' or a
`^', skip files whose filename extensions matches `ext', same as
--exclude='*.ext'. This option may be repeated and may be combined
with options -g, -M and -t to expand the recursive search.
-t TYPES, --file-type=TYPES
Search only files associated with TYPES, a comma-separated list of
file types. Each file type corresponds to a set of filename
extensions passed to option -O and filenames passed to option -g.
For capitalized file types, the search is expanded to include files
with matching file signature magic bytes, as if passed to option
-M. When a type is preceded by a `!' or a `^', excludes files of
the specified type. This option may be repeated.
--stats
Output statistics on the number of files and directories searched,
and the inclusion and exclusion constraints applied.
The file types are listed with ugrep -tlist
. The list is based on
established filename extensions and "magic bytes". If you have a file type
that is not listed, use options -O
and/or -M
. You may want to define an
alias, e.g. alias ugft='ugrep -Oft'
as a shorthand to search files with
filename suffix .ft
.
To recursively display function definitions in C/C++ files (.h
, .hpp
, .c
,
.cpp
etc.) with line numbers with -tc++
, -o
, -n
, and -f c++/functions
:
ug -on -tc++ -f c++/functions
To recursively display function definitions in .c
and .cpp
files with line
numbers with -Oc,cpp
, -o
, -n
, and -f c++/functions
:
ug -on -Oc,cpp -f c++/functions
To recursively list all shell files with -tShell
to match filename extensions
and files with shell shebangs, except files with suffix .sh
:
ug -l -tShell -O^sh ''
To recursively list all non-shell files with -t^Shell
:
ug -l -t^Shell ''
To recursively list all shell files with shell shebangs that have no shell filename extensions:
ug -l -tShell -t^shell ''
To search for lines with FIXME
in C/C++ comments, excluding FIXME
in
multi-line strings:
ug -n 'FIXME' -f c++/zap_strings myfile.cpp
To read patterns TODO
and FIXME
from standard input to match lines in the
input, while excluding matches in C++ strings:
ug -on -f - -f c++/zap_strings myfile.cpp <
Searching compressed files and archives with -z
-z, --decompress
Search compressed files and archives. Archives (.cpio, .pax, .tar)
and compressed archives (e.g. .zip, .7z, .taz, .tgz, .tpz, .tbz,
.tbz2, .tb2, .tz2, .tlz, .txz, .tzst) are searched and matching
pathnames of files in archives are output in braces. When used
with option --zmax=NUM, searches the contents of compressed files
and archives stored within archives up to NUM levels. When -g, -O,
-M, or -t is specified, searches archives for files that match the
specified globs, filename extensions, file signature magic bytes,
or file types, respectively; a side-effect of these options is that
the compressed files and archives searched are only those with
filename extensions that match known compression and archive types.
Supported compression formats: gzip (.gz), compress (.Z), zip, 7z,
bzip2 (.bz, .bz2, .bzip2, .tbz, .tbz2, .tb2, .tz2),
xz (.xz, .txz) and lzma (requires suffix .lzma, .tlz),
zstd (.zst, .zstd, .tzst),
lz4 (requires suffix .lz4),
brotli (requires suffix .br).
--zmax=NUM
When used with option -z (--decompress), searches the contents of
compressed files and archives stored within archives by up to NUM
expansion stages. The default --zmax=1 only permits searching
uncompressed files stored in cpio, pax, tar, zip and 7z archives;
compressed files and archives are detected as binary files and are
effectively ignored. Specify --zmax=2 to search compressed files
and archives stored in cpio, pax, tar, zip and 7z archives. NUM
may range from 1 to 99 for up to 99 decompression and de-archiving
steps. Increasing NUM values gradually degrades performance.
Files compressed with gzip (.gz
), compress (.Z
), bzip2 (.bz
, .bz2
,
.bzip2
), lzma (.lzma
), xz (.xz
), lz4 (.lz4
), zstd (.zst
, .zstd
),
brotli (.br
) and bzip3 (.bz3
) are searched with option -z
when the
corresponding libraries are installed and compiled with ugrep. This option
does not require files to be compressed. Uncompressed files are searched also,
although slower.
Other compression formats can be searched with ugrep filters.
Archives (cpio, jar, pax, tar, zip and 7z) are searched with option -z
.
Regular files in an archive that match are output with the archive pathnames
enclosed in {
and }
braces. Supported tar formats are v7, ustar, gnu,
oldgnu, and pax. Supported cpio formats are odc, newc, and crc. Not supported
is the obsolete non-portable old binary cpio format. Archive formats cpio,
tar, and pax are automatically recognized with option -z
based on their
content, independent of their filename suffix.
By default, uncompressed archives stored within zip archives are also searched: all cpio, pax, and tar files stored in zip and 7z archives are automatically recognized and searched. However, by default, compressed files stored within archives are not recognized, e.g. zip files stored within tar files are not searched but rather all compressed files and archives are searched as if they are binary files without decompressing them.
Specify --zmax=NUM
to search archives that contain compressed files and
archives for up to NUM
levels deep. The value of NUM
may range from 1 to
99 for up to 99 decompression and de-archiving steps to expand up to 99 nested
archives. Larger --zmax=NUM
values degrade performance. It is unlikely you
will ever need 99 as --zmax=2
suffices for most practical use cases, such as
searching zip files stored in tar files.
When option -z
is used with options -g
, -O
, -M
, or -t
, archives and
compressed and uncompressed files that match the filename selection criteria
(glob, extension, magic bytes, or file type) are searched only. For example,
ugrep -r -z -tc++
searches C++ files such as main.cpp
and zip and tar
archives that contain C++ files such as main.cpp
. Also included in the
search are compressed C++ files such as main.cpp.gz
and main.cpp.xz
when
present. Also any cpio, pax, tar, zip and 7z archives when present are
searched for C++ files that they contain, such as main.cpp
. Use option
--stats
to see a list of the glob patterns applied to filter file pathnames
in the recursive search and when searching archive contents.
When option -z
is used with options -g
, -O
, -M
, or -t
to search cpio,
jar, pax, tar, zip and 7z archives, archived files that match the filename
selection criteria are searched only.
The gzip, compress, zip, bzip2, xz, and zstd formats are automatically
detected, which is useful when reading compressed data from standard input,
e.g. input redirected from a pipe. Other compression formats require a
filename suffix: .lzma
for lzma, .lz4
for lz4, .br
for brotli and .bz3
for bzip3. Also the compressed tar archive shorthands .taz
, .tgz
and
.tpz
for gzip, .tbz
, .tbz2
, .tb2
, and .tz2
for bzip2, .tlz
for
lzma, .txz
for xz, and .tzst
for zstd are recognized. To search these
formats with ugrep from standard input, use option --label='stdin.bz2'
for
bzip2, --label='stdin.lzma'
for lzma, --label='stdin.lz4
for lz4 and so on.
The name stdin
is arbitrary and may be omitted:
format | filename suffix | tar/pax archive short suffix | suffix required? | detect on stdin | library |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
gzip | .gz | .taz , .tgz , .tpz | no | automatic | libz |
compress | .Z | .taZ , .tZ | no | automatic | built-in |
zip | .zip , .zipx , .ZIP | no | automatic | libz | |
bzip2 | .bz , .bz2 , .bzip2 | .tb2 , .tbz , .tbz2 , .tz2 | no | automatic | libbz2 |
xz | .xz | .txz | no | automatic | liblzma |
zstd | .zst , .zstd | .tzst | no | automatic | libzstd |
7zip | .7z | yes | --label=.7z | built-in | |
brotli | .br | yes | --label=.br | libbrotlidec | |
bzip3 | .bz3 | yes | --label=.bz3 | libbzip3 | |
lzma | .lzma | .tlz | yes | --label=.lzma | liblzma |
lz4 | .lz4 | yes | --label=.lz4 | liblz4 |
The gzip, bzip2, xz, lz4 and zstd formats support concatenated compressed files. Concatenated compressed files are searched as one single file.
Supported zip compression methods are stored (0), deflate (8), bzip2 (12), lzma (14), xz (95) and zstd (93). The bzip2, lzma, xz and zstd methods require ugrep to be compiled with the corresponding compression libraries.
Searching encrypted zip archives is not supported (perhaps in future releases, depending on requests for enhancements).
Searching 7zip archives takes a lot more RAM and more time compared to other
methods. The 7zip LZMA SDK implementation does not support streaming,
requiring a physical seekable 7z file. This means that 7z files cannot be
searched when nested within archives. Best is to avoid 7zip. Support for 7zip
can be disabled with ./build.sh --disable-7zip
to build ugrep.
Option -z
uses threads for task parallelism to speed up searching larger
files by running the decompressor concurrently with a search of the
decompressed stream.
To list all non-empty files stored in a package.zip
archive, including the
contents of all cpio, pax, tar, zip and 7z files that are stored in it:
ug --zmax=2 -z -l '' package.zip
Same, but only list the Python source code files, including scripts that invoke
Python, with option -tPython
(ugrep -tlist
for details):
ug --zmax=2 -z -l -tPython '' package.zip
To search Python applications distributed as a tar file with their dependencies
includes as wheels (zip files with Python code), searching for the word
my_class
in app.tgz
:
ug --zmax=2 -z -tPython -w my_class app.tgz
To recursively search C++ files including compressed files for the word
my_function
, while skipping C and C++ comments:
ug -z -r -tc++ -Fw my_function -f cpp/zap_comments
To search lzma, lz4, brotli, and bzip3 compressed data on standard input,
option --label
may be used to specify the extension corresponding to the
compression format to force decompression when the bzip2 extension is not
available to ugrep, for example:
cat myfile.lz4 | ugrep -z --label='stdin.lz4' 'xyz'
To search file main.cpp
in project.zip
for TODO
and FIXME
lines:
ug -z -g main.cpp -w -e 'TODO' -e 'FIXME' project.zip
To search tarball project.tar.gz
for C++ files with TODO
and FIXME
lines:
ug -z -tc++ -w -e 'TODO' -e 'FIXME' project.tar.gz
To search files matching the glob *.txt
in project.zip
for the word
license
in any case (note that the -g
glob argument must be quoted):
ug -z -g '*.txt' -w -i 'license' project.zip
To display and page through all C++ files in tarball project.tgz
:
ug --pager -z -tc++ '' project.tgz
To list the files matching the gitignore-style glob /**/projects/project1.*
in projects.tgz
, by selecting files containing in the archive the text
December 12
:
ug -z -l -g '/**/projects/project1.*' -F 'December 12' projects.tgz
To view the META-INF/MANIFEST.MF data in a jar file with -Ojar
and -OMF
to
select the jar file and the MF file therein (-Ojar
is required, otherwise the
jar file will be skipped though we could read it from standard input instead):
ug -z -h -OMF,jar '' my.jar
To extract C++ files that contain FIXME
from project.tgz
, we use -m1
with --format="'%z '"
to generate a space-separated list of pathnames of file
located in the archive that match the word FIXME
:
tar xzf project.tgz `ugrep -z -l -tc++ --format='%z ' -w FIXME project.tgz`
To perform a depth-first search with find
, then use cpio
and ugrep
to
search the files:
find . -depth -print | cpio -o | ugrep -z 'xyz'
Find files by file signature and shebang "magic bytes" with -M, -O and -t
--ignore-files[=FILE]
Ignore files and directories matching the globs in each FILE that
is encountered in recursive searches. The default FILE is
`.gitignore'. Matching files and directories located in the
directory of the FILE and in subdirectories below are ignored.
Globbing syntax is the same as the --exclude-from=FILE gitignore
syntax, but files and directories are excluded instead of only
files. Directories are specifically excluded when the glob ends in
a `/'. Files and directories explicitly specified as command line
arguments are never ignored. This option may be repeated to
specify additional files.
-M MAGIC, --file-magic=MAGIC
Only files matching the signature pattern MAGIC are searched. The
signature \"magic bytes\" at the start of a file are compared to
the MAGIC regex pattern. When matching, the file will be searched.
When MAGIC is preceded by a `!' or a `^', skip files with matching
MAGIC signatures. This option may be repeated and may be combined
with options -O and -t to expand the search. Every file on the
search path is read, making searches potentially more expensive.
-O EXTENSIONS, --file-extension=EXTENSIONS
Search only files whose filename extensions match the specified
comma-separated list of EXTENSIONS, same as --include='*.ext' for
each `ext' in EXTENSIONS. When `ext' is preceded by a `!' or a
`^', skip files whose filename extensions matches `ext', same as
--exclude='*.ext'. This option may be repeated and may be combined
with options -g, -M and -t to expand the recursive search.
-t TYPES, --file-type=TYPES
Search only files associated with TYPES, a comma-separated list of
file types. Each file type corresponds to a set of filename
extensions passed to option -O and filenames passed to option -g.
For capitalized file types, the search is expanded to include files
with matching file signature magic bytes, as if passed to option
-M. When a type is preceded by a `!' or a `^', excludes files of
the specified type. This option may be repeated.
-g GLOBS, --glob=GLOBS
Search only files whose name matches the specified comma-separated
list of GLOBS, same as --include='glob' for each `glob' in GLOBS.
When a `glob' is preceded by a `!' or a `^', skip files whose name
matches `glob', same as --exclude='glob'. When `glob' contains a
`/', full pathnames are matched. Otherwise basenames are matched.
When `glob' ends with a `/', directories are matched, same as
--include-dir='glob' and --exclude-dir='glob'. A leading `/'
matches the working directory. This option may be repeated and may
be combined with options -M, -O and -t to expand searches. See
`ugrep --help globs' and `man ugrep' section GLOBBING for details.
--stats
Output statistics on the number of files and directories searched,
and the inclusion and exclusion constraints applied.
To recursively list all files that start with #!
shebangs:
ug -l -M'#!' ''
To recursively list all files that start with #
but not with #!
shebangs:
ug -l -M'#' -M'^#!' ''
To recursively list all Python files (extension .py
or a shebang) with
-tPython
:
ug -l -tPython ''
To recursively list all non-shell files with -t^Shell
:
ug -l -t^Shell ''
To recursively list Python files (extension .py
or a shebang) that have
import statements, including hidden files with -.
:
ug -l. -tPython -f python/imports
Fuzzy search with -Z
-Z[best][+-~][MAX], --fuzzy=[best][+-~][MAX]
Fuzzy mode: report approximate pattern matches within MAX errors.
The default is -Z1: one deletion, insertion or substitution is
allowed. If `+`, `-' and/or `~' is specified, then `+' allows
insertions, `-' allows deletions and `~' allows substitutions. For
example, -Z+~3 allows up to three insertions or substitutions, but
no deletions. If `best' is specified, then only the best matching
lines are output with the lowest cost per file. Option -Zbest
requires two passes over a file and cannot be used with standard
input or Boolean queries. Option --sort=best orders matching files
by best match. The first character of an approximate match always
matches a character at the beginning of the pattern. To fuzzy
match the first character, replace it with a `.' or `.?'. Option
-U applies fuzzy matching to ASCII and bytes instead of Unicode
text. No whitespace may be given between -Z and its argument.
The beginning of a pattern always matches the first character of an approximate
match as a practical strategy to prevent many false "randomized" matches for
short patterns. This also greatly improves search speed. Make the first
character optional to optionally match it, e.g. p?attern
or use a dot as
the start of the pattern to match any wide character (but this is slow).
Line feed (\n
) and NUL (\0
) characters are never deleted or substituted to
ensure that fuzzy matches do not extend the pattern match beyond the number of
lines specified by the regex pattern.
Option -U
(--ascii
or --binary
) restricts fuzzy matches to ASCII and
binary only with edit distances measured in bytes. Otherwise, fuzzy pattern
matching is performed with Unicode patterns and edit distances are measured in
Unicode characters.
Option --sort=best
orders files by best match. Files with at least one exact
match anywhere in the file are shown first, followed by files with approximate
matches in increasing minimal edit distance order. That is, ordered by the
minimum error (edit distance) found among all approximate matches per file.
To recursively search for approximate matches of the word foobar
with -Z
,
i.e. approximate matching with one error, e.g. Foobar
, foo_bar
, foo bar
,
fobar
and other forms with one missing, one extra or one deleted character:
ug -Z 'foobar'
Same, but matching words only with -w
and ignoring case with -i
:
ug -Z -wi 'foobar'
Same, but permit up to 2 insertions with -Z+2
, no deletions/substitutions
(matches up to 2 extra characters, such as foos bar
), insertions-only offers
the fastest fuzzy matching method:
ug -Z+3 -wi 'foobar'
Same, but sort matches from best (at least one exact match or fewest fuzzy match errors) to worst:
ug -Z+3 -wi --sort=best 'foobar'
Note: because sorting by best match requires two passes over the input files, the efficiency of concurrent searching is significantly reduced.
Same, but with customized formatting to show the edit distance "cost" of the
approximate matches with format field %Z
and %F
to show the pathname:
ug -Z+3 -wi --format='%F%Z:%O%~' --sort=best 'foobar'
Same, but this time count the matches with option -c
and display them with a
custom format using %m
, where %Z
is the average cost per match:
ug -c -Z+3 -wi --format='%F%Z:%m%~' --sort=best 'foobar'
Note: options -c
and -l
do not report a meaningful %Z
value in the
--format
output, because %Z
is the edit distance cost of a single match.
Search hidden files with -.
--hidden, -.
Search hidden files and directories.
To recursively search the working directory, including hidden files and
directories, for the word login
in shell scripts:
ug -. -tShell 'login'
Using filter utilities to search documents with --filter
--filter=COMMANDS
Filter files through the specified COMMANDS first before searching.
COMMANDS is a comma-separated list of `exts:command [option ...]',
where `exts' is a comma-separated list of filename extensions and
`command' is a filter utility. Files matching one of `exts' are
filtered. When `exts' is a `*', all files are filtered. One or
more `option' separated by spacing may be specified, which are
passed verbatim to the command. A `%' as `option' expands into the
pathname to search. For example, --filter='pdf:pdftotext % -'
searches PDF files. The `%' expands into a `-' when searching
standard input. When a `%' is not specified, a filter utility
should read from standard input and write to standard output.
Option --label=.ext may be used to specify extension `ext' when
searching standard input. This option may be repeated.
--filter-magic-label=LABEL:MAGIC
Associate LABEL with files whose signature "magic bytes" match the
MAGIC regex pattern. Only files that have no filename extension
are labeled, unless +LABEL is specified. When LABEL matches an
extension specified in --filter=COMMANDS, the corresponding command
is invoked. This option may be repeated.
The --filter
option associates one or more filter utilities with specific
filename extensions. A filter utility is selected based on the filename
extension and executed by forking a process: the utility's standard input
reads the open input file and the utility's standard output is searched. When
a %
is specified as an option to the utility, the %
is expanded to the
pathname of the file to open and read by the utility.
When a specified utility is not found on the system, an error message is displayed. When a utility fails to produce output, e.g. when the specified options for the utility are invalid, the search is silently skipped.
Filtering does not apply to files stored in archives and compressed files. A filter is usually applied to a file that is physically stored in the file system. Archived files are not physically stored.
Common filter utilities are cat
(concat, pass through), head
(select first
lines or bytes) tr
(translate), iconv
and uconv
(convert), and more
advanced utilities, such as:
pdftotext
to convert pdf to textantiword
to convert doc to textpandoc
to convert .docx, .epub, and other document formatsexiftool
to read meta information embedded in image and video media formats.soffice
to convert office documentscsvkit
to convert spreadsheetsopenssl
to convert certificates and key files to text and other formats
The ugrep+
and ug+
commands use the pdftotext
, antiword
, pandoc
and
exiftool
filters, when installed, to search pdfs, documents, e-books, and
image metadata.
Also decompressors may be used as filter utilities, such as unzip
, gunzip
,
bunzip2
, unlzma
, unxz
, lzop
and 7z
that decompress files to standard
output when option --stdout
is specified. For example:
ug --filter='lzo:lzop -d --stdout -' ...
ug --filter='gz:gunzip -d --stdout -' ...
ug --filter='7z:7z x -so %' ...
The --filter='lzo:lzop -d --stdout -'
option decompresses files with
extension lzo
to standard output with --stdout
with the compressed stream
being read from standard input with -
. The --filter='7z:7z x -so -si
option decompresses files with extension 7z
to standard output -so
while
reading standard input -si
with the compressed file contents.
Note that ugrep option -z
is typically faster to search compressed files
compared to --filter
.
The --filter
option may also be used to run a user-defined shell script to
filter files. For example, to invoke an action depending on the filename
extension of the %
argument. Another use case is to pass a file to more than
one filter, which can be accomplished with a shell script containing the line
tool1 $1; tool2 $1
. This filters the file argument $1
with tool1
followed by tool2
to produce combined output to search for pattern matches.
Likewise, we can use a script with the line tool1 $1 | tool2
to stack two
filters tool1
and tool2
.
The --filter
option may also be used as a predicate to skip certain files
from the search. As the most basic example, consider the false
utility that
exits with a nonzero exit code without reading input or producing output.
Therefore, --filter='swp: false'
skips all .swp
files from recursive
searches. The same can be done more efficiently with -O^swp
. However,
the --filter
option could invoke a script that determines if the filename
passed as a %
argument meets certain constraints. If the constraint is met
the script copies standard input to standard output with cat
. If not, the
script exits.
Warning: option --filter
should not be used with utilities that modify
files. Otherwise searches may be unpredicatable. In the worst case files may
be lost, for example when the specified utility replaces or deletes the file
passed to the command with --filter
option %
.
To recursively search files including PDF files in the working directory
without recursing into subdirectories (with -1
), for matches of drink me
using the pdftotext
filter to convert PDF to text without preserving page
breaks:
ug -r -1 --filter='pdf:pdftotext -nopgbrk % -' 'drink me'
To recursively search text files for eat me
while converting non-printable
characters in .txt and .md files using the cat -v
filter:
ug -r -ttext --filter='txt,md:cat -v' 'eat me'
The same, but specifying the .txt and .md filters separately:
ug -r -ttext --filter='txt:cat -v, md:cat -v' 'eat me'
To search the first 8K of a text file:
ug --filter='txt:head -c 8192' 'eat me' wonderland.txt
To recursively search and list the files that contain the word Alice
,
including .docx and .epub documents using the pandoc
filter:
ug -rl -w --filter='docx,epub:pandoc --wrap=preserve -t plain % -o -' 'Alice'
Important: the pandoc
utility requires an input file and will not read
standard input. Option %
expands into the full pathname of the file to
search. The output format specified is markdown
, which is close enough to
text to be searched.
To recursively search and list the files that contain the word Alice
,
including .odt, .doc, .docx, .rtf, .xls, .xlsx, .ppt, .pptx documents using the
soffice
filter:
ug -rl -w --filter='odt,doc,docx,rtf,xls,xlsx,ppt,pptx:soffice --headless --cat %' 'Alice'
Important: the soffice
utility will not output any text when one or more
LibreOffice GUIs are open. Make sure to quit all LibreOffice apps first. This
looks like a bug, but the LibreOffice developers do not appear to fix this
any time soon (unless perhaps more people complain?). You can work around this
problem by specifying a specific user profile for soffice
with the following
semi-documented argument passed to soffice
:
-env:UserInstallation=file:///home/user/.libreoffice-alt
.
To recursively search and display rows of .csv, .xls, and .xlsx spreadsheets
that contain 10/6
using the in2csv
filter of csvkit:
ug -r -Ocsv,xls,xlsx --filter='xls,xlsx:in2csv %' '10/6'
To search .docx, .xlsx, and .pptx files converted to XML for a match with
10/6
using unzip
as a filter:
ug -lr -Odocx,xlsx,pptx --filter='docx,xlsx,pptx:unzip -p %' '10/6'
Important: unzipping docx, xlxs, pptx files produces extensive XML output
containing meta information and binary data such as images. By contrast,
ugrep option -z
with -Oxml
selects the XML components only:
ug -z -lr -Odocx,xlsx,pptx,xml '10/6'
Note: docx, xlsx, and pptx are zip files containing multiple components.
When selecting the XML components with option -Oxml
in docx, xlsx, and pptx
documents, we should also specify -Odocx,xlsx,pptx
to search these type of
files, otherwise these files will be ignored.
To recurssively search X509 certificate files for lines with Not After
(e.g.
to find expired certificates), using openssl
as a filter:
ug -r 'Not After' -Ocer,der,pem --filter='pem:openssl x509 -text,cer,crt,der:openssl x509 -text -inform der'
Note that openssl
warning messages are displayed on standard error. If
a file cannot be converted it is probably in a different format. This can
be resolved by writing a shell script that executes openssl
with options
based on the file content. Then write a script with ugrep --filter
.
To search PNG files by filename extension with -tpng
using exiftool
:
ug -r -i 'copyright' -tpng --filter='*:exiftool %'
Same, but also include files matching PNG "magic bytes" with -tPng
and
--filter-magic-label='+png:\x89png\x0d\x0a\x1a\x0a'
to select the png
filter:
ug -r -i 'copyright' -tPng --filter='png:exiftool %' --filter-magic-label='+png:\x89png\x0d\x0a\x1a\x0a'
Note that +png
overrides any filename extension match for --filter
.
Otherwise, without a +
, the filename extension, when present, takes priority
over labelled magic patterns to invoke the corresponding filter command.
The LABEL
used with --filter-magic-label
and --filter
has no specific
meaning; any name or string that does not contain a :
or ,
may be used.
Searching and displaying binary files with -U, -W, and -X
--hexdump[=[1-8][a][bch][A[NUM]][B[NUM]][C[NUM]]]
Output matches in 1 to 8 columns of 8 hexadecimal octets. The
default is 2 columns or 16 octets per line. Argument `a' outputs a
`*' for all hex lines that are identical to the previous hex line,
`b' removes all space breaks, `c' removes the character column, `h'
removes hex spacing, `A' includes up to NUM hex lines after a
match, `B' includes up to NUM hex lines before a match and `C'
includes up to NUM hex lines before and after a match. Arguments
`A', `B' and `C' are the same as options -A, -B and -C when used
with --hexdump. See also options -U, -W and -X.
-U, --ascii, --binary
Disables Unicode matching for binary file matching, forcing PATTERN
to match bytes, not Unicode characters. For example, -U '\xa3'
matches byte A3 (hex) instead of the Unicode code point U+00A3
represented by the UTF-8 sequence C2 A3. See also --dotall.
-W, --with-hex
Output binary matches in hexadecimal, leaving text matches alone.
This option is equivalent to the --binary-files=with-hex option.
To omit the matching line from the hex output, use both options -W
and --hexdump. See also options -U.
-X, --hex
Output matches and matching lines in hexadecimal. This option is
equivalent to the --binary-files=hex option. To omit the matching
line from the hex output use option --hexdump. See also option -U.
--dotall
Dot `.' in regular expressions matches anything, including newline.
Note that `.*' matches all input and should not be used.
Note that --hexdump
differs from -X
by omitting the matching line from the
hex output, showing only the matching pattern using a minimal number of hex
lines. Additional match context hex lines are output with the -ABC
context
options or with --hexdump=C3
to output 3 hex lines as context, for example.
To search a file for ASCII words, displaying text lines as usual while binary
content is shown in hex with -U
and -W
:
ug -UW '\w+' myfile
To hexdump an entire file as a match with -X
:
ug -X '' myfile
To hexdump an entire file with -X
, displaying line numbers and byte offsets
with -nb
(here with -y
to display all line numbers):
ug -Xynb '' myfile
To hexdump lines containing one or more \0 in a (binary) file using a
non-Unicode pattern with -U
and -X
:
ug -UX '\x00+' myfile
Same, but hexdump the entire file as context with -y
(note that this
line-based option does not permit matching patterns with newlines):
ug -UX -y '\x00+' myfile
Same, compacted to 32 bytes per line without the character column:
ug -UX -y '\x00+' myfile
To match the binary pattern A3..A3.
(hex) in a binary file without
Unicode pattern matching (which would otherwise match \xaf
as a Unicode
character U+00A3 with UTF-8 byte sequence C2 A3) and display the results
in compact hex with --hexdump
with pager:
ug --pager --hexdump -U '\xa3[\x00-\xff]{2}\xa3[\x00-\xff]' a.out
Same, but using option --dotall
to let .
match any byte, including
newline that is not matched by dot (the default as required by grep):
ug --dotall --pager --hexdump -U '\xa3.{2}\xa3.' a.out
To list all files containing a RPM signature, located in the rpm
directory and
recursively below (see for example
list of file signatures):
ug -RlU '\A\xed\xab\xee\xdb' rpm
Ignore binary files with -I
-I Ignore matches in binary files. This option is equivalent to the
--binary-files=without-match option.
To recursively search without following symlinks and ignoring binary files:
ug -rl -I 'xyz'
To ignore specific binary files with extensions such as .exe, .bin, .out, .a,
use --exclude
or --exclude-from
:
ug -rl --exclude-from=ignore_binaries 'xyz'
where ignore_binaries
is a file containing a glob on each line to ignore
matching files, e.g. *.exe
, *.bin
, *.out
, *.a
. Because the command is
quite long to type, an alias for this is recommended, for example ugs
(ugrep
source):
alias ugs="ugrep --exclude-from=~/ignore_binaries"
ugs -rl 'xyz'
Ignoring .gitignore-specified files with --ignore-files
--ignore-files[=FILE]
Ignore files and directories matching the globs in each FILE that
is encountered in recursive searches. The default FILE is
`.gitignore'. Matching files and directories located in the
directory of the FILE and in subdirectories below are ignored.
Globbing syntax is the same as the --exclude-from=FILE gitignore
syntax, but files and directories are excluded instead of only
files. Directories are specifically excluded when the glob ends in
a `/'. Files and directories explicitly specified as command line
arguments are never ignored. This option may be repeated to
specify additional files.
Option --ignore-files
looks for .gitignore
, or the specified FILE
, in
recursive searches. When .gitignore
, or the specified FILE
, is found while
traversing directory tree branches down, the .gitignore
file is used to
temporarily extend the previous exclusions with the additional globs in
.gitignore
to apply the combined exclusions to the directory tree rooted at
the .gitignore
location. Use --stats
to show the selection criteria
applied to the search results and the locations of each FILE
found. To avoid
confusion, files and directories specified as command-line arguments to
ugrep are never ignored.
Note that exclude glob patterns take priority over include glob patterns when
specified with command line options. By contrast, negated glob patterns
specified with !
in --ignore-files
files take priority. This effectively
overrides the exclusions and resolves conflicts in favor of listing matching
files that are explicitly specified as exceptions and should be included in the
search.
See also Using gitignore-style globs to select directories and files to search.
To recursively search without following symlinks, while ignoring files and
directories ignored by .gitignore (when present), use option --ignore-files
.
Note that -r
is the default when no FILE arguments are specified, we use it
here to make the examples easier to follow.
ug -rl --ignore-files 'xyz'
Same, but includes hidden files with -.
rather than ignoring them:
ug -rl. --ignore-files 'xyz'
To recursively list all files that are not ignored by .gitignore (when present)
with --ignore-files
:
ug -rl --ignore-files ''
Same, but list shell scripts that are not ignored by .gitignore, when present:
ug -rl -tShell '' --ignore-files
To recursively list all files that are not ignored by .gitignore and are also
not excluded by .git/info/exclude
:
ug -rl '' --ignore-files --exclude-from=.git/info/exclude
Same, but by creating a symlink to .git/info/exclude
to make the exclusions
implicit:
ln -s .git/info/exclude .ignore
ug -rl '' --ignore-files --ignore-files=.ignore
Using gitignore-style globs to select directories and files to search
-g GLOBS, --glob=GLOBS
Search only files whose name matches the specified comma-separated
list of GLOBS, same as --include='glob' for each `glob' in GLOBS.
When a `glob' is preceded by a `!' or a `^', skip files whose name
matches `glob', same as --exclude='glob'. When `glob' contains a
`/', full pathnames are matched. Otherwise basenames are matched.
When `glob' ends with a `/', directories are matched, same as
--include-dir='glob' and --exclude-dir='glob'. A leading `/'
matches the working directory. This option may be repeated and may
be combined with options -M, -O and -t to expand searches. See
`ugrep --help globs' and `man ugrep' section GLOBBING for details.
--exclude=GLOB
Skip files whose name matches GLOB using wildcard matching, same as
-g ^GLOB. GLOB can use **, *, ?, and [...] as wildcards, and \\ to
quote a wildcard or backslash character literally. When GLOB
contains a `/', full pathnames are matched. Otherwise basenames
are matched. When GLOB ends with a `/', directories are excluded
as if --exclude-dir is specified. Otherwise files are excluded.
Note that --exclude patterns take priority over --include patterns.
GLOB should be quoted to prevent shell globbing. This option may
be repeated.
--exclude-dir=GLOB
Exclude directories whose name matches GLOB from recursive
searches, same as -g ^GLOB/. GLOB can use **, *, ?, and [...] as
wildcards, and \\ to quote a wildcard or backslash character
literally. When GLOB contains a `/', full pathnames are matched.
Otherwise basenames are matched. Note that --exclude-dir patterns
take priority over --include-dir patterns. GLOB should be quoted
to prevent shell globbing. This option may be repeated.
--exclude-from=FILE
Read the globs from FILE and skip files and directories whose name
matches one or more globs. A glob can use **, *, ?, and [...] as
wildcards, and \ to quote a wildcard or backslash character
literally. When a glob contains a `/', full pathnames are matched.
Otherwise basenames are matched. When a glob ends with a `/',
directories are excluded as if --exclude-dir is specified.
Otherwise files are excluded. A glob starting with a `!' overrides
previously-specified exclusions by including matching files. Lines
starting with a `#' and empty lines in FILE are ignored. When FILE
is a `-', standard input is read. This option may be repeated.
--from=FILE
Read additional pathnames of files to search from FILE. When FILE
is a `-', standard input is read. This option is useful with `find
... -print | ugrep --from=- ...' to search specific files.
--ignore-files[=FILE]
Ignore files and directories matching the globs in each FILE that
is encountered in recursive searches. The default FILE is
`.gitignore'. Matching files and directories located in the
directory of the FILE and in subdirectories below are ignored.
Globbing syntax is the same as the --exclude-from=FILE gitignore
syntax, but files and directories are excluded instead of only
files. Directories are specifically excluded when the glob ends in
a `/'. Files and directories explicitly specified as command line
arguments are never ignored. This option may be repeated to
specify additional files.
--include=GLOB
Search only files whose name matches GLOB using wildcard matching,
same as -g GLOB. GLOB can use **, *, ?, and [...] as wildcards,
and \\ to quote a wildcard or backslash character literally. When
GLOB contains a `/', full pathnames are matched. Otherwise
basenames are matched. When GLOB ends with a `/', directories are
included as if --include-dir is specified. Otherwise files are
included. Note that --exclude patterns take priority over
--include patterns. GLOB should be quoted to prevent shell
globbing. This option may be repeated.
--include-dir=GLOB
Only directories whose name matches GLOB are included in recursive
searches, same as -g GLOB/. GLOB can use **, *, ?, and [...] as
wildcards, and \\ to quote a wildcard or backslash character
literally. When GLOB contains a `/', full pathnames are matched.
Otherwise basenames are matched. Note that --exclude-dir patterns
take priority over --include-dir patterns. GLOB should be quoted
to prevent shell globbing. This option may be repeated.
--include-from=FILE
Read the globs from FILE and search only files and directories
whose name matches one or more globs. A glob can use **, *, ?, and
[...] as wildcards, and \ to quote a wildcard or backslash
character literally. When a glob contains a `/', full pathnames
are matched. Otherwise basenames are matched. When a glob ends
with a `/', directories are included as if --include-dir is
specified. Otherwise files are included. A glob starting with a
`!' overrides previously-specified inclusions by excluding matching
files. Lines starting with a `#' and empty lines in FILE are
ignored. When FILE is a `-', standard input is read. This option
may be repeated.
-O EXTENSIONS, --file-extension=EXTENSIONS
Search only files whose filename extensions match the specified
comma-separated list of EXTENSIONS, same as --include='*.ext' for
each `ext' in EXTENSIONS. When `ext' is preceded by a `!' or a
`^', skip files whose filename extensions matches `ext', same as
--exclude='*.ext'. This option may be repeated and may be combined
with options -g, -M and -t to expand the recursive search.
--stats
Output statistics on the number of files and directories searched,
and the inclusion and exclusion constraints applied.
See also Including or excluding mounted file systems from searches.
Gitignore-style glob syntax and conventions:
pattern | matches |
---|---|
* | anything except / |
? | any one character except / |
[abc-e] | one character a ,b ,c ,d ,e |
[^abc-e] | one character not a ,b ,c ,d ,e ,/ |
[!abc-e] | one character not a ,b ,c ,d ,e ,/ |
/ | when used at the start of a glob, matches working directory |
**/ | zero or more directories |
/** | when at the end of a glob, matches everything after the / |
\? | a ? or any other character specified after the backslash |
When a glob pattern contains a path separator /
, the full pathname is
matched. Otherwise the basename of a file or directory is matched in recursive
searches. For example, *.h
matches foo.h
and bar/foo.h
. bar/*.h
matches bar/foo.h
but not foo.h
and not bar/bar/foo.h
.
When a glob pattern begins with a /
, files and directories are matched at the
working directory, not recursively. For example, use a leading /
to force
/*.h
to match foo.h
but not bar/foo.h
.
When a glob pattern ends with a /
, directories are matched instead of files,
same as --include-dir
.
When a glob starts with a !
as specified with -g!GLOB
, or specified in a
FILE
with --include-from=FILE
or --exclude-from=FILE
, it is negated.
To view a list of inclusions and exclusions that were applied to a search, use
option --stats
.
To list only readable files with names starting with foo
in the working
directory, that contain xyz
, without producing warning messages with -s
and
-l
:
ug -sl 'xyz' foo*
The same, but using deep recursion with inclusion constraints (note that
-g'/foo*
is the same as --include='/foo*'
and -g'/foo*/'
is the same as
--include-dir='/foo*'
, i.e. immediate subdirectories matching /foo*
only):
ug -rl 'xyz' -g'/foo*' -g'/foo*/'
Note that -r
is the default, we use it here to make the examples easier to
follow.
To exclude directory bak
located in the working directory:
ug -rl 'xyz' -g'^/bak/'
To exclude all directoies bak
at any directory level deep:
ug -rl 'xyz' -g'^bak/'
To only list files in the working directory and its subdirectory doc
,
that contain xyz
(note that -g'/doc/'
is the same as
--include-dir='/doc'
, i.e. immediate subdirectory doc
only):
ug -rl 'xyz' -g'/doc/'
To only list files that are on a subdirectory path doc
that includes
subdirectory html
anywhere, that contain xyz
:
ug -rl 'xyz' -g'doc/**/html/'
To only list files in the working directory and in the subdirectories doc
and doc/latest
but not below, that contain xyz
:
ug -rl 'xyz' -g'/doc/' -g'/doc/latest/'
To recursively list .cpp files in the working directory and any subdirectory
at any depth, that contain xyz
:
ug -rl 'xyz' -g'*.cpp'
The same, but using a .gitignore-style glob that matches pathnames (globs with
/
) instead of matching basenames (globs without /
) in the recursive search:
ug -rl 'xyz' -g'**/*.cpp'
Same, but using option -Ocpp
to match file name extensions:
ug -rl -Ocpp 'xyz'
To recursively list all files in the working directory and below that are not ignored by a specific .gitignore file:
ug -rl '' --exclude-from=.gitignore
To recursively list all files in the working directory and below that are not ignored by one or more .gitignore files, when any are present:
ug -rl '' --ignore-files
Including or excluding mounted file systems from searches
--exclude-fs=MOUNTS
Exclude file systems specified by MOUNTS from recursive searches.
MOUNTS is a comma-separated list of mount points or pathnames to
directories. When MOUNTS is not specified, only descends into the
file systems associated with the specified file and directory
search targets, i.e. excludes all other file systems. Note that
--exclude-fs=MOUNTS take priority over --include-fs=MOUNTS. This
option may be repeated.
--include-fs=MOUNTS
Only file systems specified by MOUNTS are included in recursive
searches. MOUNTS is a comma-separated list of mount points or
pathnames to directories. When MOUNTS is not specified, restricts
recursive searches to the file system of the working directory,
same as --include-fs=. (dot). Note that --exclude-fs=MOUNTS take
priority over --include-fs=MOUNTS. This option may be repeated.
These options control recursive searches across file systems by comparing device numbers. Mounted devices and symbolic links to files and directories located on mounted file systems may be included or excluded from recursive searches by specifying a mount point or a pathname of any directory on the file system to specify the applicable file system.
Note that a list of mounted file systems is typically stored in /etc/mtab
.
To restrict recursive searches to the file system(s) of the search targets
only, without crossing into other file systems (similar to find
option -x
):
ug -rl --exclude-fs 'xyz' /sys /var
To restrict recursive searches to the file system of the working directory only, without crossing into other file systems:
ug -l --include-fs 'xyz'
In fact, for this case we can use --exclude-fs
because we search the working
directory as the target and we want to exclude all other file systems:
ug -l --exclude-fs 'xyz'
To exclude the file systems mounted at /dev
and /proc
from recursive
searches:
ug -l --exclude-fs=/dev,/proc 'xyz'
To only include the file system associated with drive d:
in recursive
searches:
ug -l --include-fs=d:/ 'xyz'
To exclude fuse
and tmpfs
type file systems from recursive searches:
exfs=`ugrep -w -e fuse -e tmpfs /etc/mtab | ugrep -P '^\S+ (\S+)' --format='%,%1'`
ug -l --exclude-fs="$exfs" 'xyz'
Counting the number of matches with -c and -co
-c, --count
Only a count of selected lines is written to standard output.
If -o or -u is specified, counts the number of patterns matched.
If -v is specified, counts the number of non-matching lines. If
-m1, (with a comma or --min-count=1) is specified, counts only
matching files without outputting zero matches.
To count the number of lines in a file:
ug -c '' myfile.txt
To count the number of lines with TODO
:
ug -c -w 'TODO' myfile.cpp
To count the total number of TODO
in a file, use -c
and -o
:
ug -co -w 'TODO' myfile.cpp
To count the number of ASCII words in a file:
ug -co '[[:word:]]+' myfile.txt
To count the number of ASCII and Unicode words in a file:
ug -co '\w+' myfile.txt
To count the number of Unicode characters in a file:
ug -co '\p{Unicode}' myfile.txt
To count the number of zero bytes in a file:
ug -UX -co '\x00' image.jpg
Displaying file, line, column, and byte offset info with -H, -n, -k, -b, and -T
-b, --byte-offset
The offset in bytes of a matched line is displayed in front of the
respective matched line. When used with option -u, displays the
offset in bytes of each pattern matched. Byte offsets are exact
for ASCII, UTF-8, and raw binary input. Otherwise, the byte offset
in the UTF-8 converted input is displayed.
-H, --with-filename
Always print the filename with output lines. This is the default
when there is more than one file to search.
-k, --column-number
The column number of a matched pattern is displayed in front of the
respective matched line, starting at column 1. Tabs are expanded
when columns are counted, see option --tabs.
-n, --line-number
Each output line is preceded by its relative line number in the
file, starting at line 1. The line number counter is reset for
each file processed.
-T, --initial-tab
Add a tab space to separate the file name, line number, column
number, and byte offset with the matched line.
To display the file name -H
, line -n
, and column -k
numbers of matches in
myfile.cpp
, with spaces and tabs to space the columns apart with -T
:
ug -THnk 'main' myfile.cpp
To display the line with -n
of word main
in myfile.cpp
:
ug -nw 'main' myfile.cpp
To display the entire file myfile.cpp
with line -n
numbers:
ug -n '' myfile.cpp
To recursively search for C++ files with main
, showing the line and column
numbers of matches with -n
and -k
:
ug -r -nk -tc++ 'main'
To display the byte offset of matches with -b
:
ug -r -b -tc++ 'main'
To display the line and column numbers of matches in XML with --xml
:
ug -r -nk --xml -tc++ 'main'
Displaying colors with --color and paging the output with --pager
--color[=WHEN], --colour[=WHEN]
Mark up the matching text with the expression stored in the
GREP_COLOR or GREP_COLORS environment variable. The possible
values of WHEN can be `never', `always', or `auto', where `auto'
marks up matches only when output on a terminal. The default is
`auto'.
--colors=COLORS, --colours=COLORS
Use COLORS to mark up text. COLORS is a colon-separated list of
one or more parameters `sl=' (selected line), `cx=' (context line),
`mt=' (matched text), `ms=' (match selected), `mc=' (match
context), `fn=' (file name), `ln=' (line number), `cn=' (column
number), `bn=' (byte offset), `se=' (separator), `qp=' (TUI
prompt), `qe=' (TUI errors), `qr=' (TUI regex), `qm=' (TUI regex
meta characters), `ql=' (TUI regex lists and literals), `qb=' (TUI
regex braces). Parameter values are ANSI SGR color codes or `k'
(black), `r' (red), `g' (green), `y' (yellow), `b' (blue), `m'
(magenta), `c' (cyan), `w' (white), or leave empty for no color.
Upper case specifies background colors. A `+' qualifies a color as
bright. A foreground and a background color may be combined with
font properties `n' (normal), `f' (faint), `h' (highlight), `i'
(invert), `u' (underline). Parameter `hl' enables file name
hyperlinks. Parameter `rv' reverses the `sl=' and `cx=' parameters
when option -v is specified. Selectively overrides GREP_COLORS.
Legacy grep single parameter codes may be specified, for example
--colors='7;32' or --colors=ig to set ms (match selected).
--tag[=TAG[,END]]
Disables colors to mark up matches with TAG. END marks the end of
a match if specified, otherwise TAG. The default is `___'.
--pager[=COMMAND]
When output is sent to the terminal, uses COMMAND to page through
the output. COMMAND defaults to environment variable PAGER when
defined or `less'. Enables --heading and --line-buffered.
--pretty[=WHEN]
When output is sent to a terminal, enables --color, --heading, -n,
--sort, --tree and -T when not explicitly disabled. WHEN can be
`never', `always', or `auto'. The default is `auto'.
--tree, -^
Output directories with matching files in a tree-like format for
option -c or --count, -l or --files-with-matches, -L or
--files-without-match. This option is enabled by --pretty when the
output is sent to a terminal.
To change the color palette, set the GREP_COLORS
environment variable or use
--colors=COLORS
. The value is a colon-separated list of ANSI SGR parameters
that defaults to cx=33:mt=1;31:fn=1;35:ln=1;32:cn=1;32:bn=1;32:se=36
:
param | result |
---|---|
sl= | selected lines |
cx= | context lines |
rv | Swaps the sl= and cx= capabilities when -v is specified |
mt= | matching text in any matching line |
ms= | matching text in a selected line. The substring mt= by default |
mc= | matching text in a context line. The substring mt= by default |
fn= | file names |
ln= | line numbers |
cn= | column numbers |
bn= | byte offsets |
se= | separators |
hl | hyperlink file names, same as --hyperlink |
qp= | TUI prompt |
qe= | TUI errors |
qr= | TUI regex |
qm= | TUI regex meta characters |
ql= | TUI regex lists and literals |
qb= | TUI regex braces |
Multiple SGR codes may be specified for a single parameter when separated by a
semicolon, e.g. mt=1;31
specifies bright red. The following SGR codes are
available on most color terminals:
code | c | effect | code | c | effect |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | n | normal font and color | 2 | f | faint (not widely supported) |
1 | h | highlighted bold font | 21 | H | highlighted bold off |
4 | u | underline | 24 | U | underline off |
7 | i | invert video | 27 | I | invert off |
30 | k | black text | 90 | +k | bright gray text |
31 | r | red text | 91 | +r | bright red text |
32 | g | green text | 92 | +g | bright green text |
33 | y | yellow text | 93 | +y | bright yellow text |
34 | b | blue text | 94 | +b | bright blue text |
35 | m | magenta text | 95 | +m | bright magenta text |
36 | c | cyan text | 96 | +c | bright cyan text |
37 | w | white text | 97 | +w | bright white text |
40 | K | black background | 100 | +K | bright gray background |
41 | R | dark red background | 101 | +R | bright red background |
42 | G | dark green background | 102 | +G | bright green background |
43 | Y | dark yellow backgrounda | 103 | +Y | bright yellow background |
44 | B | dark blue background | 104 | +B | bright blue background |
45 | M | dark magenta background | 105 | +M | bright magenta background |
46 | C | dark cyan background | 106 | +C | bright cyan background |
47 | W | dark white background | 107 | +W | bright white background |
See Wikipedia ANSI escape code - SGR parameters
For quick and easy color specification, the corresponding single-letter color names may be used in place of numeric SGR codes and semicolons are not required to separate color names. Color names and numeric codes may be mixed.
For example, to display matches in underlined bright green on bright selected lines, aiding in visualizing white space in matches and file names:
export GREP_COLORS='sl=1:cx=33:ms=1;4;32;100:mc=1;4;32:fn=1;32;100:ln=1;32:cn=1;32:bn=1;32:se=36'
The same, but with single-letter color names:
export GREP_COLORS='sl=h:cx=y:ms=hug+K:mc=hug:fn=hg+K:ln=hg:cn=hg:bn=hg:se=c'
Another color scheme that works well:
export GREP_COLORS='cx=hb:ms=hiy:mc=hic:fn=hi+y+K:ln=hg:cn=hg:bn=hg:se='
Modern Windows command interpreters support ANSI escape codes. Named or
numeric colors can be set with SET GREP_COLORS
, for example:
SET GREP_COLORS=sl=1;37:cx=33:mt=1;31:fn=1;35:ln=1;32:cn=1;32:bn=1;32:se=36
To disable colors on Windows:
SET GREP_COLORS=""
Color intensities may differ per platform and per terminal program used, which affects readability.
Option -y
outputs every line of input, including non-matching lines as
context. The use of color helps distinguish matches from non-matching context.
To copy silver searcher's color palette:
export GREP_COLORS='mt=30;43:fn=1;32:ln=1;33:cn=1;33:bn=1;33'
To produce color-highlighted results (--color
is redundance since it is the
default):
ug --color -r -n -k -tc++ 'FIXME.*'
To page through the results with pager (less -R
by default):
ug --pager -r -n -k -tc++ 'FIXME'
To display a hexdump of a zip file itself (i.e. without decompressing), with
color-highlighted matches of the zip magic bytes PK\x03\x04
(--color
is
redundant since it is the default):
ug --color -y -UX 'PK\x03\x04' some.zip
To use predefined patterns to list all #include
and #define
in C++ files:
ug --pretty -r -n -tc++ -f c++/includes -f c++/defines
Same, but overriding the color of matches as inverted yellow (reverse video)
and headings with yellow on blue using --pretty
:
ug --pretty --colors="ms=yi:fn=hyB" -r -n -tc++ -f c++/includes -f c++/defines
To list all #define FOO...
macros in C++ files, color-highlighted:
ug --color=always -r -n -tc++ -f c++/defines | ug 'FOO.*'
Same, but restricted to .cpp
files only:
ug --color=always -r -n -Ocpp -f c++/defines | ug 'FOO.*'
To search tarballs for matching names of PDF files (assuming bash is our shell):
for tb in *.tar *.tar.gz *.tgz; do echo "$tb"; tar tfz "$tb" | ugrep '.*\.pdf$'; done
Output matches in JSON, XML, CSV, C++
--cpp Output file matches in C++. See also options --format and -u.
--csv Output file matches in CSV. If -H, -n, -k, or -b is specified,
additional values are output. See also options --format and -u.
--json Output file matches in JSON. If -H, -n, -k, or -b is specified,
additional values are output. See also options --format and -u.
--xml Output file matches in XML. If -H, -n, -k, or -b is specified,
additional values are output. See also options --format and -u.
To recursively search for lines with TODO
and display C++ file matches in
JSON with line number properties:
ug -tc++ -n --json 'TODO'
To recursively search for lines with TODO
and display C++ file matches in
XML with line and column number attributes:
ug -tc++ -nk --xml 'TODO'
To recursively search for lines with TODO
and display C++ file matches in CSV
format with file pathname, line number, and column number fields:
ug -tc++ --csv -Hnk 'TODO'
To extract a table from an HTML file and put it in C/C++ source code using
-o
:
ug -o --cpp '.*' index.html > table.cpp
Customized output with --format
--format=FORMAT
Output FORMAT-formatted matches. For example --format='%f:%n:%O%~'
outputs matching lines `%O' with filename `%f` and line number `%n'
followed by a newline `%~'. If -P is specified, FORMAT may include
`%1' to `%9', `%[NUM]#' and `%[NAME]#' to output group captures. A
`%%' outputs `%'. See `ugrep --help format' and `man ugrep'
section FORMAT for details. When option -o is specified, option -u
is also enabled. Context options -A, -B, -C and -y are ignored.
-P, --perl-regexp
Interpret PATTERN as a Perl regular expression.
Use option -P
to use group captures and backreferences. Capturing groups in
regex patterns are parenthesized expressions (pattern)
. The first group is
referenced in FORMAT
by %1
, the second by %2
and so on. Named captures
are of the form (?pattern)
and are referenced in FORMAT
by
%[NAME]#
.
The following output formatting options may be used. The FORMAT
string
%
-fields are listed in a table further below:
option | result |
---|---|
--format-begin=FORMAT | FORMAT beginning the search |
--format-open=FORMAT | FORMAT opening a file and a match was found |
--format=FORMAT | FORMAT for each match in a file |
--format-close=FORMAT | FORMAT closing a file and a match was found |
--format-end=FORMAT | FORMAT ending the search |
The following tables show the formatting options corresponding to --csv
,
--json
, and --xml
.
--csv
option | format string (within quotes) |
---|---|
--format-open | '%+' |
--format | '%[,]$%H%N%K%B%V%~%u' |
--json
option | format string (within quotes) |
---|---|
--format-begin | '[' |
--format-open | '%,%~ {%~ %[,%~ ]$%["file": ]H"matches": [' |
--format | '%,%~ { %[, ]$%["line": ]N%["column": ]K%["offset": ]B"match": %J }%u' |
--format-close | '%~ ]%~ }' |
--format-end | '%~]%~' |
--xml
option | format string (within quotes) |
---|---|
--format-begin | '%~' |
--format-open | ' |
%, | if not the first match: a comma, same as %[,]> |
%: | if not the first match: a colon, same as %[:]> |
%; | if not the first match: a semicolon, same as %[;]> |
%│ | if not the first match: a vertical bar, same as %[│]> |
%S | if not the first match: separator, see also %[SEP]$ |
%[TEXT]S | if not the first match: TEXT and separator, see also %[SEP]$ |
%s | the separator, see also %[TEXT]S and %[SEP]$ |
%R | if option --break or --heading is used: a newline |
%m | the number of matches, sequential (or number of matching files with --format-end ) |
%M | the number of matching lines (or number of matching files with --format-end ) |
%O | the matching line is output as is (a raw string of bytes) |
%o | the match is output as is (a raw string of bytes) |
%Q | the matching line as a quoted string, \" and \\ replace " and \ |
%q | the match as a quoted string, \" and \\ replace " and \ |
%C | the matching line formatted as a quoted C/C++ string |
%c | the match formatted as a quoted C/C++ string |
%J | the matching line formatted as a quoted JSON string |
%j | the match formatted as a quoted JSON string |
%V | the matching line formatted as a quoted CSV string |
%v | the match formatted as a quoted CSV string |
%X | the matching line formatted as XML character data |
%x | the match formatted as XML character data |
%Y | the matching line formatted in hex |
%y | the match formatted in hex |
%A | byte range of the match in hex |
%w | the width of the match, counting (wide) characters |
%d | the size of the match, counting bytes |
%e | the ending byte offset of the match |
%Z | the edit distance cost of an approximate match with option -Z |
%u | select unique lines only unless option -u is used |
%[hhhh]U | U+hhhh Unicode code point |
%[CODE]= | a color CODE, such as ms , see colors |
%= | turn color off |
%1 %2 ... %9 | the first regex group capture of the match, and so on up to group %9 , requires option -P |
%[NUM]# | the group capture NUM ; requires option -P |
%[NUM]b | the byte offset of the group capture NUM ; requires option -P |
%[NUM]e | the ending byte offset of the group capture NUM ; requires option -P |
%[NUM]d | the byte length of the group capture NUM ; requires option -P |
%[NUM]j | the group capture NUM as JSON; requires option -P |
%[NUM]q | the group capture NUM quoted; requires option -P |
%[NUM]x | the group capture NUM as XML; requires option -P |
%[NUM]y | the group capture NUM as hex; requires option -P |
%[NUM]v | the group capture NUM as CSV; requires option -P |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]# | the first group capture NUM that matched; requires option -P |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]b | the byte offset of the first group capture NUM that matched; requires option -P . |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]e | the ending byte offset of the first group capture NUM that matched; requires option -P . |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]d | the byte length of the first group capture NUM that matched; requires option -P . |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]j | the first group capture NUM that matched, as JSON; requires option -P |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]q | the first group capture NUM that matched, quoted; requires option -P |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]x | the first group capture NUM that matched, as XML; requires option -P |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]y | the first group capture NUM that matched, as hex; requires option -P |
%[NUM1|NUM2|...]v | the first group capture NUM that matched, as CSV; requires option -P |
%[NAME]# | the NAME d group capture; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME]b | the byte offset of the NAME d group capture; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) . |
%[NAME]e | the ending byte offset of the NAME d group capture; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) . |
%[NAME]d | the byte length of the NAME d group capture; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) . |
%[NAME]j | the NAME d group capture as JSON; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME]q | the NAME d group capture quoted; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME]x | the NAME d group capture as XML; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME]y | the NAME d group capture as hex; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME]v | the NAME d group capture as CSV; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]# | the first NAME d group capture that matched; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]b | the byte offset of the first NAME d group capture that matched; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]e | the ending byte offset of the first NAME d group capture that matched; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]d | the byte length of the first NAME d group capture that matched; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]j | the first NAME d group capture that matched, as JSON; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]q | the first NAME d group capture that matched, quoted; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]x | the first NAME d group capture that matched, as XML; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]y | the first NAME d group capture that matched, as hex; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%[NAME1|NAME2|...]v | the first NAME d group capture that matched, as CSV; requires option -P and capturing pattern (?PATTERN) |
%G | list of group capture indices/names of the match (see note) |
%[TEXT1|TEXT2|...]G | list of TEXT indexed by group capture indices that matched; requires option -P |
%g | the group capture index of the match or 1 (see note) |
%[TEXT1|TEXT2|...]g | the first TEXT indexed by the first group capture index that matched; requires option -P |
Note:
- Formatted output is written without a terminating newline, unless
%~
is explicitly specified in the format string. - Option
-o
changes the output of the%O
and%Q
fields to output the match only. - Options
-c
,-l
and-o
change the output of%C
,%J
,%X
and%Y
accordingly - The
[TEXT]
part of a field is optional and may be omitted. When present, the argument must be placed in[]
brackets, for example%[,]F
to output a comma, the pathname, and a separator, when option-H
is used. - Numeric fields such as
%n
are padded with spaces when%{width}n
is specified. - Matching line fields such as
%O
are cut to width when%{width}O
is specified or when%{-width}O
is specified to cut from the end of the line. - Character context on a matching line before or after a match is output when
%{-width}o
or%{+width}o
is specified for match fields such as%o
, where%{width}o
without a +/- sign cuts the match to the specified width. - Fields
%[SEP]$
and%u
are switches and do not write anything to the output. - The separator used by
%F
,%H
,%N
,%K
,%B
,%S
, and%G
may be changed by preceding the field with a%[SEP]$
. When[SEP]
is not provided, reverts the separator to the default separator or the separator specified by--separator
. - Formatted output is written for each matching pattern, which means that a
line may be output multiple times when patterns match more than once on the
same line. When field
%u
is found anywhere in the specified format string, matching lines are output only once unless option-u
,--ungroup
is used or when a newline is matched. - The group capture index value output by
%g
corresponds to the index of the sub-pattern matched among the alternations in the pattern when option-P
is not used. For examplefoo|bar
matchesfoo
with index 1 andbar
with index 2. With option-P
, the index corresponds to the number of the first group captured in the specified pattern. - The strings specified in the list
%[TEXT1|TEXT2|...]G
and%[TEXT1|TEXT2|...]g
should correspond to the group capture index (see the note above), i.e.TEXT1
is output for index 1,TEXT2
is output for index 2, and so on. If the list is too short, the index value is output or the name of a named group capture is output. - Option
-T
and--pretty
add right-justifying spacing to fields%N
and%K
if no leading[TEXT]
part is specified. - Field
%+
may be used in--format-open
to output the pathname heading and a newline break, respectively. Field%+
suppresses%a
,%F
,%f
,%H
,%h
and%p
output.
To output matching lines faster by omitting the header output and binary match
checks, using --format
with field %O
(output matching line as is) and field
%~
(output newline):
ug --format='%O%~' 'href=' index.html
Same, but also displaying the line and column numbers:
ug --format='%n%k: %O%~' 'href=' index.html
Same, but display a line at most once when matching multiple patterns, unless
option -u
is used:
ug --format='%u%n%k: %O%~' 'href=' index.html
To string together a list of unique line numbers of matches, separated by
commas with field %,
:
ug --format='%u%,%n' 'href=' index.html
To output the matching part of a line only with field %o
(or option -o
with
field %O
):
ug --format='%o%~' "href=[\"'][^\"'][\"']" index.html
To string together the pattern matches as CSV-formatted strings with field %v
separated by commas with field %,
:
ug --format='%,%v' "href=[\"'][^\"'][\"']" index.html
To output matches in CSV (comma-separated values), the same as option --csv
(works with options -H
, -n
, -k
, -b
to add CSV values):
ug --format='"%[,]$%H%N%K%B%V%~%u"' 'href=' index.html
To output matches in AckMate format:
ug --format=":%f%~%n;%k %w:%O%~" 'href=' index.html
To output the sub-pattern indices 1, 2, and 3 on the left to the match for the
three patterns foo
, bar
, and baz
in file foobar.txt
:
ug --format='%g: %o%~' 'foo|bar|baz' foobar.txt
Same, but using a file foos
containing three lines with foo
, bar
, and
baz
, where option -F
is used to match strings instead of regex:
ug -F -f foos --format='%g: %o%~' foobar.txt
To output one
, two
, and a word
for the sub-patterns [fF]oo
, [bB]ar
,
and any other word \w+
, respectively, using argument [one|two|a word]
with
field %g
indexed by sub-pattern (or group captures with option -P
):
ug --format='%[one|two|a word]g%~' '([fF]oo)|([bB]ar)|(\w+)' foobar.txt
To output a list of group capture indices with %G
separated by the word and
instead of the default colons with %[ and ]$
, followed by the matching line:
ug -P --format='%[ and ]$%G%$%s%O%~' '(foo)|(ba((r)|(z)))' foobar.txt
Same, but showing names instead of numbers:
ug -P --format='%[ and ]$%[foo|ba|r|z]G%$%s%O%~' '(foo)|(ba(?:(r)|(z)))' foobar.txt
Note that option -P
is required for general use of group captures for
sub-patterns. Named sub-pattern matches may be used with PCRE2 and shown in
the output:
ug -P --format='%[ and ]$%G%$%s%O%~' '(?Pfoo)|(?Pba(?:(?Pr)|(?Pz)))' foobar.txt
Replacing matches with -P --replace and --format using backreferences
--replace=FORMAT
Replace matching patterns in the output by the specified FORMAT
with `%' fields. If -P is specified, FORMAT may include `%1' to
`%9', `%[NUM]#' and `%[NAME]#' to output group captures. A `%%'
outputs `%' and `%~' outputs a newline. See option --format,
`ugrep --help format' and `man ugrep' section FORMAT for details.
-y, --any-line
Any line is output (passthru). Non-matching lines are output as
context with a `-' separator. See also options -A, -B, and -C.
-P, --perl-regexp
Interpret PATTERN as a Perl regular expression.
--format=FORMAT
Output FORMAT-formatted matches. For example --format='%f:%n:%O%~'
outputs matching lines `%O' with filename `%f` and line number `%n'
followed by a newline `%~'. If -P is specified, FORMAT may include
`%1' to `%9', `%[NUM]#' and `%[NAME]#' to output group captures. A
`%%' outputs `%'. See `ugrep --help format' and `man ugrep'
section FORMAT for details. When option -o is specified, option -u
is also enabled. Context options -A, -B, -C and -y are ignored.
See customized output with --format for details on the FORMAT
fields.
For option -o
, the replacement is not automatically followed by a newline to
allow for more flexibility in replacements. To output a newline, use %~
in
the FORMAT
string.
Use option -P
to use group captures and backreferences. Capturing groups in
regex patterns are parenthesized expressions (pattern)
and the first is
referenced in FORMAT
by %1
, the second by %2
and so on. Named captures
are of the form (?pattern)
and are referenced in FORMAT
by
%[NAME]#
.
To display pattern matches with their sequential match number using
--replace='%m:%o'
where %m
is the sequential match number and %o
is the
pattern matched:
ug --replace='%m:%o' pattern myfile.txt
Same, but passing the file through with option -y
, while applying the
replacements to the output:
ug -y --replace='%m:%o' pattern myfile.txt
To extract table cells from an HTML file using Perl matching (-P
) to support
group captures with lazy quantifier (.*?)
, and translate the matches to a
comma-separated list with format %,%1
(conditional comma and group capture):
ug -P -o '(.*?)' --replace='%,%1' index.html
Same, but using --format='%,%1'
instead and we do not need -o
(note that
--replace
color-highlights matches shown on a terminal but --format
does
not):
ug -P '(.*?)' --format='%,%1' index.html
Same, but displaying the formatted matches line-by-line, with --replace
or
with --format
:
ug -P -o '(.*?)' --replace='%,%1' index.html
ug -P '(.*?)' --format='%1%~' index.html
To collect all href
URLs from all HTML and PHP files down the working
directory, then sort them:
ug -r -thtml,php -P '<[^<>]+href\h*=\h*.([^\x27"]+).' --format='%1%~' | sort -u
Same, but much easier by using the predefined html/href
pattern:
ug -r -thtml,php -P -f html/href --format='%1%~' | sort -u
Same, but in this case select `