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                                                                  grep(1)



        _________________________________________________________________
        grep, egrep, fgrep                                        Command
        search a file for a pattern
        _________________________________________________________________


        SYNTAX

        grep [ options ] expression [ files ]

        egrep [ options ] [ expression ] [ files ]

        fgrep [ options ] [ string ] [ files ]


        DESCRIPTION

        Commands of the grep family search the input files (standard
        input default) for lines matching a pattern.  Normally, each line
        found is copied to the standard output.  Grep patterns are
        limited regular expressions in the style of ed(1); it uses a
        compact non-deterministic algorithm.  Egrep patterns are full
        regular expressions; it uses a fast deterministic algorithm that
        sometimes needs exponential space.  Fgrep patterns are fixed
        strings; it is fast and compact.  Options are:

        -v    All lines but those matching are printed.
        -x    (Exact) only lines matched in their entirety are printed
              (fgrep only).
        -c    Only a count of matching lines is printed.
        -l    Only the names of files with matching lines are listed
              (once), separated by new-lines.
        -n    Each line is preceded by its relative line number in the
              file.
        -b    Each line is preceded by the block number on which it was
              found.  This is sometimes useful in locating disk block
              numbers by context.
        -s    The error messages produced for nonexistent or unreadable
              files are suppressed (grep only).
        -e expression
              Same as a simple expression argument, but useful when the
              expression begins with a - (does not work with grep).
        -f file
              The regular expression (egrep) or strings list (fgrep) is
              taken from the file.  For fgrep, each line of the file is
              taken to contain a separate string.
        -i    Ignore upper/lowercase distinction during comparisons.

        In all cases, the file name is output if there is more than one
        input file.  Take care when using the characters $, *, [, ^, |,
        (, ), and \ in expression, because they are also meaningful to



        DG/UX 4.00                                                 Page 1
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                                                                  grep(1)



        the shell.  It is safest to enclose the entire expression
        argument in single quotes '...'.

        Fgrep searches for lines that contain the string or (if the -f
        option is given) any of the strings.

        Egrep accepts regular expressions as in ed(1), except for \( and
        \), with the addition of:

        1.    A regular expression followed by + matches one or more
              occurrences of the regular expression.
        2.    A regular expression followed by ? matches 0 or 1
              occurrences of the regular expression.
        3.    Two regular expressions separated by | or by a new-line
              match strings that are matched by either.
        4.    A regular expression may be enclosed in parentheses () for
              grouping.

        The order of precedence of operators is [], then *?+, then
        concatenation, then | and new-line.



        _________________________________________________________________
        EXAMPLES

        $ grep root /etc/passwd


        Prints the lines in the file "/etc/passwd" that contain the login
        name "root".

        $ who | grep "xyz"


        Prints the name, terminal number, and time that the user with
        login name "xyz" logged in if "xyz" is logged in.  If "xyz" is
        not logged in, this command line prints nothing.

        $ grep rsh /etc/passwd|cut -d: -f5


        Searches the "/etc/passwd" file for users who run a restricted
        shell, rsh(1).  Then cut(1) prints the fifth field of every line
        that  grep identifies.  The fifth field contains the users'
        names.


        $ egrep fs2 /etc/passwd





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                                                                  grep(1)



        Searches through the file "/etc/passwd" and prints all lines
        containing the pattern "fs2" on the standard output.

        $ egrep -l -e -ooutfile src/*


        Searches through all the files in the subdirectory "src" for all
        lines containing the regular expression "-ooutfile".  Prints the
        names of the files containing the pattern.

        $ egrep 'int|long' prog.c


        Searches through the file "prog.c" in the current working
        directory for all lines containing the pattern "int" or the
        pattern "long".  The "|" character stands for logical "or".
        Prints all of the lines that contain "int" or "long" on the
        standard output.


        $ ps -af | fgrep -x -f expfile


        Searches through the list of active processes for lines that
        entirely match the lines in "expfile".

        $ find . -exec | fgrep -l attachment {} \;


        Prints the names of all files under the current working directory
        that contain the string "attachment".

        _________________________________________________________________


        SEE ALSO

        ed(1), sed(1), sh(1).


        DIAGNOSTICS

        Exit status is 0 if any matches are found, 1 if none, 2 for
        syntax errors or inaccessible files (even if matches were found).


        CAVEATS

        Ideally there should be only one grep, but we do not know a
        single algorithm that spans a wide enough range of space-time
        tradeoffs.



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                                                                  grep(1)



        Lines are limited to BUFSIZ characters; longer lines are
        truncated.  (BUFSIZ is defined in /usr/include/stdio.h.)
        If a line has embedded nulls, grep will match only up to the
        first null; if it matches, it will print the entire line.


















































        DG/UX 4.00                                                 Page 4
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Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026