Grep: Difference between revisions
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<tt>-n</tt> prefixes the line with the ''line number''. | <tt>-n</tt> prefixes the line with the ''line number''. | ||
<blockquote style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border: solid thin lightgrey;"> | |||
:[sed#Insert_a_Line.2FAppend_in_a_Specific_Position_.28line_number.29_in_a_file]] | |||
</blockquote> | |||
!!!Characters that Need Escaping | !!!Characters that Need Escaping |
Revision as of 03:10, 16 February 2016
Internal
Overview
grep accepts regular expressions. Both " " and ' ' can be used to enclose the expression to search for.
If the expression is found, the enclosing lines are sent to stdout the command returns 0 (success).
If the expression is NOT found, the command returns 1 (failure).
if grep -q "some regex" ./file.txt; then # do something if expression is found else # do something else if the expression is not found fi
Regular Expressions
^ - beginning of line $ - end of line \t - tab [0-9]* \. dot
Recipes
Including TWO expressions at the same time
cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep 'processor\|siblings' processor : 0 siblings : 2 processor : 1 siblings : 2
The method works even if there are spaces and other regular expression characters within the alternative regexes:
... | grep ' logger: [1-9]\+\.\|(concurrent mode failure)'
This will select either "logger: [1-9]\+\." or "(concurrent mode failure)"
Excluding TWO expressions at the same time
echo "something" | grep -v "blah" | grep -v "blah2"
Do not Send Anything to stout
... and avoid > /dev/null:
grep -q
--color
grep --color 'context.layer='
Prefix the Line with the "Line Number" (-n)
-n prefixes the line with the line number.
- [sed#Insert_a_Line.2FAppend_in_a_Specific_Position_.28line_number.29_in_a_file]]
!!!Characters that Need Escaping
Same as [sed#SpecialCharactersNeedToBeEscapedInRegularExpressions]
!!!Return Only the First Match
{{{ -m 1 }}}
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