Linux comand: grep

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Revision as of 06:35, 18 August 2016 by Rafahsolis (talk | contribs)
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Command-line utility to search lines matching regular expresions in plain-text data sets.

Option Description Example
-c Count grep -c 'root' /etc/passwd
-e Specify multiple search patterns grep -e 'root' -e 'system' /etc/passwd
-r Recursive
-v Show lines not matching the pattern
-i Case insensitive
-n Output line numbering
-E Enable regex use (similar to egrep)
-o Show only the match, not the full line
-f FILE Specify file to search in.
-H Print file name

Examples:

grep '\<a.*\>' archivo
cat archivo | grep "\<a.*\>"
grep "#" /boot/grub/menu.lst
grep -v "#" /boot/grub/menu.lst
grep -c "iface" /etc/network/interfaces
grep -e "root" -e "password" archivo
grep -n -e "root" -e "password" archivo
grep -r "password" *
ifconfig eth0 | grep -oiE '([0-9A-F]{2}:){5}[0-9A-F]{2}' # Show eth0 MAC address
grep -Eio '[a-z0-9._-]+@[a-z0-9.-]+[a-z]{2,4}' file.txt  # Extract e-main addresses from file.txt

Find files containing text pattern

grep -rnw '/path/' -e "pattern"
  • r or -R is recursive,
  • n is line number, and
  • w stands match the whole word.
  • l (lower-case L) can be added to just give the file name of matching files.
--exclude or --include parameter could be used for efficient searching. Something like below:
grep --include=\*.{c,h} -rnw '/path/to/somewhere/' -e "pattern"
grep --exclude=*.o -rnw '/path/to/somewhere/' -e "pattern"
grep --exclude-dir={dir1,dir2,*.dst} -rnw '/path/to/somewhere/' -e "pattern"