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In the event of any discrepancy 20.\" between these versions and the original IEEE and The Open Group 21.\" Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard is the referee 22.\" document. The original Standard can be obtained online at 23.\" http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html. 24.\" 25.\" This notice shall appear on any product containing this material. 26.\" 27.\" The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the 28.\" Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). 29.\" You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 30.\" 31.\" You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE 32.\" or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. 33.\" See the License for the specific language governing permissions 34.\" and limitations under the License. 35.\" 36.\" When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each 37.\" file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. 38.\" If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the 39.\" fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying 40.\" information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 41.\" 42.\" 43.\" Copyright 1989 AT&T 44.\" Portions Copyright (c) 1992, X/Open Company Limited All Rights Reserved 45.\" Copyright (c) 2008, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved 46.\" Copyright 2018 Nexenta Systems, Inc. 47.\" 48.Dd February 10, 2018 49.Dt GREP 1 50.Os 51.Sh NAME 52.Nm grep , 53.Nm egrep , 54.Nm fgrep 55.Nd search a file for a pattern 56.Sh SYNOPSIS 57.Nm grep 58.Op Fl E Ns | Ns Fl F 59.Op Fl bchHilnrRsqvwx 60.Op Fl A Ar num 61.Op Fl B Ar num 62.Op Fl C Ar num Ns | Ns Fl Ns Ar num 63.Oo Fl e Ar pattern_list Oc Ns ... 64.Oo Fl f Ar pattern_file Oc Ns ... 65.Op Ar pattern_list 66.Oo Ar file Oc Ns ... 67.Sh DESCRIPTION 68The 69.Nm 70utility searches text files for a pattern and prints all lines that contain that 71pattern. 72If no files are specified, 73.Nm 74assumes standard input. 75Normally, each line found is copied to standard output. 76The file name is printed before each line found if there is more than one input 77file. 78.Pp 79.Nm 80handles patterns as basic regular expressions (BREs); 81.Nm egrep 82.Pq same as Nm Fl E 83handles patterns as extended regular expressions (EREs); 84.Nm fgrep 85.Pq same as Nm Fl F 86handles patterns as fixed strings. 87.Sh OPTIONS 88The following options are supported: 89.Bl -tag -width Ds 90.It Fl A Ar num 91Prints 92.Ar num 93input lines of context after each matching line. 94If there are multiple matching lines, their context lines are separated by a 95.Ql -- 96delimiter line. 97.It Fl b 98Precedes each line by the block number on which it was found. 99This can be useful in locating block numbers by context (first block is 0). 100.It Fl B Ar num 101Prints 102.Ar num 103input lines of context before each matching line. 104If there are multiple matching lines, their context lines are separated by a 105.Ql -- 106delimiter line. 107.It Fl c 108Prints only a count of the lines that contain the pattern. 109Overrides 110.Fl l . 111.It Fl C Ar num Ns \&, Fl Ns Ar num 112Prints 113.Ar num 114input lines of context before and 115.Ar number 116input lines of context after each matching line. 117If there are multiple matching lines, their context lines are separated by a 118.Ql -- 119delimiter line. 120.It Fl e Ar pattern_list 121Specifies one or more patterns to be used during the search for input. 122Patterns in 123.Ar pattern_list 124must be separated by a NEWLINE character. 125A null pattern can be specified by two adjacent newline characters in 126.Ar pattern_list . 127Unless the 128.Fl E 129or 130.Fl F 131option is also specified, each pattern is treated as a BRE, as described in 132.Xr regex 5 . 133.It Fl E 134Matches using extended regular expressions. 135Treats each pattern specified as an ERE, as described in 136.Xr regex 5 . 137If any entire ERE pattern matches an input line, the line is matched. 138A null ERE matches every line. 139.It Fl f Ar pattern_file 140Reads one or more patterns from the file named by the path name 141.Ar pattern_file . 142Patterns in 143.Ar pattern_file 144are terminated by a NEWLINE character. 145A null pattern can be specified by an empty line in 146.Ar pattern_file . 147Unless the 148.Fl E 149or 150.Fl F 151option is also specified, each pattern is treated as a BRE, as described in 152.Xr regex 5 . 153.It Fl F 154Matches using fixed strings. 155Treats each pattern specified as a string instead of a regular expression. 156If an input line contains any of the patterns as a contiguous sequence of bytes, 157the line is matched. 158A null string matches every line. 159.It Fl h 160Prevents the name of the file containing the matching line from being prepended 161to that line. 162Used when searching multiple files. 163.It Fl H 164Precedes each line by the name of the file containing the matching line. 165.It Fl i 166Ignores upper/lower case distinction during comparisons. 167.It Fl l 168Prints only the names of files with matching lines, separated by NEWLINE 169characters. 170Does not repeat the names of files when the pattern is found more than once. 171Overrides 172.Fl H . 173.It Fl n 174Precedes each line by its line number in the file (first line is 1). 175.It Fl q 176Quiet. 177Does not write anything to the standard output, regardless of matching lines. 178Exits with zero status if an input line is selected. 179Overrides 180.Fl c 181and 182.Fl l . 183.It Fl r 184Read all files under each directory, recursively. 185Follow symbolic links on the command line, but skip symlinks that are 186encountered recursively. 187If file is a device, FIFO, or socket, skip it. 188.It Fl R 189Read all files under each directory, recursively, following all symbolic links. 190.It Fl s 191Suppresses error messages about nonexistent or unreadable files. 192.It Fl v 193Prints all lines except those that contain the pattern. 194.It Fl w 195Searches for the expression as a word as if surrounded by 196.Ql \e< 197and 198.Ql \e> . 199.It Fl x 200Considers only input lines that use all characters in the line to match an 201entire fixed string or regular expression to be matching lines. 202.El 203.Sh OPERANDS 204The following operands are supported: 205.Bl -tag -width Ds 206.It Ar file 207A path name of a file to be searched for the patterns. 208If no 209.Ar file 210operands are specified, the standard input is used. 211.It Ar pattern_list 212Specifies one or more patterns to be used during the search for input. 213This operand is treated as if it were specified as 214.Fl e Ar pattern_list . 215Should not be specified if either 216.Fl e 217or 218.Fl f 219is specified. 220.El 221.Sh USAGE 222Be careful using the characters 223.Ql $ , 224.Ql * , 225.Ql \&[ , 226.Ql ^ , 227.Ql | , 228.Ql \&( , 229.Ql \&) , 230and 231.Ql \e 232in the 233.Ar pattern_list 234because they are also meaningful to the shell. 235It is safest to enclose the entire 236.Ar pattern_list 237in single quotes: 238.Li '...' . 239.Pp 240The 241.Fl e Ar pattern 242option has the same effect as the 243.Ar pattern 244operand, but is useful when 245.Ar pattern 246begins with the hyphen delimiter. 247It is also useful when it is more convenient to provide multiple patterns as 248separate arguments. 249.Pp 250Multiple 251.Fl e 252and 253.Fl f 254options are accepted and 255.Nm 256uses all of the patterns it is given while matching input text lines. 257Notice that the order of evaluation is not specified. 258If an implementation finds a null string as a pattern, it is allowed to use that 259pattern first, matching every line, and effectively ignore any other patterns. 260.Pp 261The 262.Fl q 263option provides a means of easily determining whether or not a pattern (or 264string) exists in a group of files. 265When searching several files, it provides a performance improvement (because it 266can quit as soon as it finds the first match) and requires less care by the user 267in choosing the set of files to supply as arguments (because it exits zero if it 268finds a match even if 269.Nm 270detected an access or read error on earlier file operands). 271.Ss Large File Behavior 272See 273.Xr largefile 5 274for the description of the behavior of 275.Nm 276when encountering files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte (2^31 bytes). 277.Sh EXIT STATUS 278The following exit values are returned: 279.Bl -tag -width Ds 280.It Sy 0 281One or more matches were found. 282.It Sy 1 283No matches were found. 284.It Sy 2 285Syntax errors or inaccessible files (even if matches were found). 286.El 287.Sh EXAMPLES 288.Bl -tag -width Ds 289.It Sy Example 1 No Finding All Uses of a Word 290To find all uses of the word 291.Ql Posix 292(in any case) in the file 293.Pa text.mm , 294and write with line numbers: 295.Bd -literal 296$ grep -i -n posix text.mm 297.Ed 298.It Sy Example 2 No Finding All Empty Lines 299To find all empty lines in the standard input: 300.Bd -literal 301$ grep ^$ 302.Ed 303.Pp 304or 305.Bd -literal 306$ grep -v . 307.Ed 308.It Sy Example 3 No Finding Lines Containing Strings 309All of the following commands print all lines containing strings 310.Ql abc 311or 312.Ql def 313or both: 314.Bd -literal 315$ grep 'abc 316def' 317$ grep -e 'abc 318def' 319$ grep -e 'abc' -e 'def' 320$ grep -E 'abc|def' 321$ grep -E -e 'abc|def' 322$ grep -E -e 'abc' -e 'def' 323$ grep -E 'abc 324def' 325$ grep -E -e 'abc 326def' 327$ grep -F -e 'abc' -e 'def' 328$ grep -F 'abc 329def' 330$ grep -F -e 'abc 331def' 332.Ed 333.It Sy Example 4 No Finding Lines with Matching Strings 334Both of the following commands print all lines matching exactly 335.Ql abc 336or 337.Ql def : 338.Bd -literal 339$ grep -E '^abc$ 340^def$' 341$ grep -F -x 'abc 342def' 343.Ed 344.El 345.Sh ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES 346See 347.Xr environ 5 348for descriptions of the following environment variables that affect the 349execution of 350.Nm : 351.Ev LANG , LC_ALL , LC_COLLATE , LC_CTYPE , LC_MESSAGES , 352and 353.Ev NLSPATH . 354.Sh CODE SET INDEPENDENCE 355.Sy Enabled 356.Sh INTERFACE STABILITY 357.Sy Committed 358.Sh SEE ALSO 359.Xr sed 1 , 360.Xr sh 1 , 361.Xr attributes 5 , 362.Xr environ 5 , 363.Xr largefile 5 , 364.Xr regex 5 , 365.Xr standards 5 366.Sh STANDARDS 367The 368.Nm 369utility is compliant with the 370.St -p1003.1-2008 371specification with the exception of 372.Fl s 373option being the same as 374.Fl q 375in current implementation for historic reasons. 376The flags 377.Op Fl AbBChHrRw 378are extensions to that specification. 379.Sh NOTES 380The results are unspecified if input files contain lines longer than 381.Dv LINE_MAX 382bytes or contain binary data. 383.Dv LINE_MAX 384is defined in 385.In limits.h . 386.Pp 387Portable applications should use 388.Nm Fl E 389and 390.Nm Fl F 391instead of 392.Nm egrep 393and 394.Nm fgrep , 395respectively. 396.Sh HISTORY 397The 398.Nm grep 399command first appeared in 400.At v6 . 401.Pp 402In the past 403.Pa /usr/bin/grep , 404.Pa /usr/bin/egrep , 405and 406.Pa /usr/bin/fgrep 407were separate implementations, and were not standard conforming, with standard 408conforming ones installed as 409.Pa /usr/xpg4/bin/grep , 410.Pa /usr/xpg4/bin/egrep , 411and 412.Pa /usr/xpg4/bin/fgrep , 413respectively. 414Now all non-conforming implementations are removed, and the ones previously 415found in 416.Pa /usr/xpg4/bin 417are installed in 418.Pa /usr/bin . 419