grep Command

Purpose

Searches for a pattern in a file.

Syntax

grep [ -E | -F ] [ -i ] [ -h ] [ -H ] [ -L ] [ -r | -R ] [ -s ][ -u ] [ -v ] [ -w ] [ -x ] [ -y ] [ [ [ -b ] [ -n ] ] | [ -c | -l | -q ] ] [ -p [ Separator ] ] { [ -e PatternList ... ] [ -f PatternFile ... ] | PatternList ... } [ File ... ]

Description

The grep command searches for the pattern that is specified by the Pattern parameter and writes each matching line to standard output. The patterns are limited regular expressions in the style of the ed or egrep command. The grep command uses a compact nondeterministic algorithm.

The grep command displays the name of the file that contains the matched line if you specify more than one name in the File parameter. Characters with special meaning to the shell ($, *, [, |, ^, (, ), \ ) must be in quotation marks when they appear in the Pattern parameter. When the Pattern parameter is not a simple string, you must enclose the entire pattern in single quotation marks. In an expression such as [a-z], the - (minus sign) cml specifies a range, according to the current collating sequence. A collating sequence might define equivalence classes for use in character ranges. If no files are specified, grep assumes standard input.

Notes:
  1. Do not run the grep command on a special file because it produces unpredictable results. Input lines must not contain the NULL character.
  2. Input files must end with the newline character.
  3. The newline character is not matched by the regular expressions.
  4. Although some flags can be specified simultaneously, some flags override others. For example, the -l option takes precedence over all other flags. And if you specify both the -E and -F flags, the last one specified takes priority.

Flags

Table 1. Flags
Item Description
-b Precedes each line by the block number on which it was found. Use this flag to help find disk block numbers by context. The -b flag cannot be used with input from stdin or pipes.
-c Displays only a count of matching lines.
-E Treats each pattern that is specified as an extended regular expression (ERE). A NULL value for the ERE matches every line.
Note: The grep command with the -E flag is the same as the egrep command, except that error and usage messages are different and the -s flag functions differently.
-e PatternList Specifies one or more search patterns. This flag works like a simple pattern but is useful when the pattern begins with a - (minus). Patterns must be separated by a new-line character. A NULL pattern can be specified by two adjacent new-line characters or a quotation mark followed by a new-line character ("\n). Each pattern is treated like a basic regular expression (BRE) unless the -E or -F flag is also specified. Multiple -e and -f flags are accepted by grep. The specified patterns are used when matching lines, but the order of evaluation is unspecified.
-F Treats each specified pattern as a string instead of a regular expression. A NULL string matches every line.
Note: The grep command with the -F flag is the same as the fgrep command, except that error and usage messages are different and the -s flag functions differently.
-f PatternFile Specifies a file that contains search patterns. Each pattern must be separated by a new-line character, and an empty line is considered a NULL pattern. Each pattern is treated like a basic regular expression (BRE), unless the -E or -F flag is also specified.
-h Prevents the name of the file that contains the matching line from being appended to that line. Suppresses file names when multiple files are specified.
-H If the -r or -R option is specified and a symbolic link that references a file of type directory is specified on the command line, grep searches the files of the directory that is referenced by the symbolic link and all the files in the file hierarchy under it.
-i Ignores the case (uppercase or lowercase) of letters when making comparisons.
Item Description
-l Lists just the names of files that contain matching lines. Each file name is separated by a new-line character. If standard input is searched, a path name of StandardInput is returned. The -l flag with any combination of the -c and -n flags behaves like the -l flag only.
-L If the -r or -R option is specified and a symbolic link that references a file of type directory is specified on the command line or encountered during the traversal of a file hierarchy, grep must search the files of the directory that is referenced by the symbolic link and all the files in the file hierarchy under it. If both -H and -L are specified, the last option that is specified on the command line takes effect.
-n Precedes each line with the relative line number in the file. Each file starts at line 1, and the line counter is reset for each file processed.
-p[Separator] Displays the entire paragraph that contains matched lines. Paragraphs are delimited by paragraph separators, as specified by the Separator parameter, which are patterns in the same form as the search pattern. Lines containing the paragraph separators are used only as separators; they are never included in the output. The default paragraph separator is a blank line.
-q Suppresses all writing to standard output, regardless of matching lines. Exits with a zero status if an input line is selected. The -q flag with any combination of the -c, -l, and -n flags behaves like the -q flag only.
-r Searches directories recursively. By default, links to directories are followed.
-R Searches directories recursively. By default, links to directories are not followed.
-s Suppresses error messages that are ordinarily written for nonexistent or unreadable files. Other error messages are not suppressed.
-u This flag causes the output to be unbuffered.
-v Displays all lines not matching the specified pattern.
-w Does a word search.
-x Displays lines that match the specified pattern exactly with no additional characters.
-y Ignores the case of letters when making comparisons.
PatternList Specifies one or more patterns to be used during the search. The patterns are treated as if they were specified by using the -e flag.
File Specifies a name of a file to be searched for patterns. If no File variable is given, the standard input is used.

Exit Status

This command returns the following exit values:

Item Description
0 A match was found.
1 No match was found.
>1 A syntax error was found or a file was inaccessible (even if matches were found).

Examples

  1. To use a pattern that contains some of the pattern-matching characters *, ^, ?, [, ], \(, \), \{, and \}, enter the following command:
    grep  "^[a-zA-Z]"  pgm.s 

    This command displays every line in pgm.s whose first character is a letter.

  2. To display all lines that do not match a pattern, enter the following command:
    grep  -v  "^#" pgm.s

    This command displays every line in pgm.s whose first character is not a # (pound sign).

  3. To display all lines in the file1 file that match either the abc or xyz string, enter the following command:
    grep -E  "abc|xyz"  file1
  4. To search for a $ (dollar sign) in the file that is named test2, enter the following command:
    grep \\$ test2

    The \\ (double backslash) characters are necessary in order to force the shell to pass a \$ (single backslash, dollar sign) to the grep command. The \ (single backslash) character tells the grep command to treat the following character (in this example the $) as a literal character rather than an expression character. Use the fgrep command to avoid the necessity of using escape characters such as the backslash.

  5. To search recursively through /tmp to find files that have the word IBM without recursing through links that points to directories, enter the following command:
    grep –R IBM /tmp
    or
    grep –r -H IBM /tmp
  6. To search recursively through /tmp to find files that have the word IBM and recurse through links as well, type:
    grep –r IBM /tmp
    or
    grep -R -L IBM /tmp

Files

Table 2. Files
Item Description
/usr/bin/grep Contains the grep command.