| 1 | .\" grep man page | 
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| 2 | .if !\n(.g \{\ | 
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| 3 | .       if !\w|\*(lq| \{\ | 
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| 4 | .               ds lq `` | 
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| 5 | .               if \w'\(lq' .ds lq "\(lq | 
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| 6 | .       \} | 
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| 7 | .       if !\w|\*(rq| \{\ | 
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| 8 | .               ds rq '' | 
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| 9 | .               if \w'\(rq' .ds rq "\(rq | 
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| 10 | .       \} | 
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| 11 | .\} | 
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| 12 | .de Id | 
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| 13 | .ds Dt \\$4 | 
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| 14 | .. | 
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| 15 | .Id $Id: grep.1,v 1.23 2002/01/22 13:20:04 bero Exp $ | 
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| 16 | .TH GREP 1 \*(Dt "GNU Project" | 
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| 17 | .SH NAME | 
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| 18 | grep, egrep, fgrep \- print lines matching a pattern | 
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| 19 | .SH SYNOPSIS | 
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| 20 | .B grep | 
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| 21 | .RI [ options ] | 
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| 22 | .I PATTERN | 
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| 23 | .RI [ FILE .\|.\|.] | 
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| 24 | .br | 
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| 25 | .B grep | 
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| 26 | .RI [ options ] | 
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| 27 | .RB [ \-e | 
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| 28 | .I PATTERN | 
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| 29 | | | 
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| 30 | .B \-f | 
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| 31 | .IR FILE ] | 
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| 32 | .RI [ FILE .\|.\|.] | 
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| 33 | .SH DESCRIPTION | 
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| 34 | .PP | 
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| 35 | .B Grep | 
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| 36 | searches the named input | 
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| 37 | .IR FILE s | 
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| 38 | (or standard input if no files are named, or | 
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| 39 | the file name | 
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| 40 | .B \- | 
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| 41 | is given) | 
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| 42 | for lines containing a match to the given | 
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| 43 | .IR PATTERN . | 
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| 44 | By default, | 
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| 45 | .B grep | 
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| 46 | prints the matching lines. | 
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| 47 | .PP | 
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| 48 | In addition, two variant programs | 
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| 49 | .B egrep | 
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| 50 | and | 
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| 51 | .B fgrep | 
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| 52 | are available. | 
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| 53 | .B Egrep | 
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| 54 | is the same as | 
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| 55 | .BR "grep\ \-E" . | 
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| 56 | .B Fgrep | 
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| 57 | is the same as | 
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| 58 | .BR "grep\ \-F" . | 
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| 59 | .SH OPTIONS | 
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| 60 | .TP | 
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| 61 | .BI \-A " NUM" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-after-context=" NUM | 
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| 62 | Print | 
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| 63 | .I NUM | 
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| 64 | lines of trailing context after matching lines. | 
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| 65 | Places a line containing | 
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| 66 | .B \-\^\- | 
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| 67 | between contiguous groups of matches. | 
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| 68 | .TP | 
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| 69 | .BR \-a ", " \-\^\-text | 
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| 70 | Process a binary file as if it were text; this is equivalent to the | 
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| 71 | .B \-\^\-binary-files=text | 
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| 72 | option. | 
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| 73 | .TP | 
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| 74 | .BI \-B " NUM" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-before-context=" NUM | 
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| 75 | Print | 
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| 76 | .I NUM | 
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| 77 | lines of leading context before matching lines. | 
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| 78 | Places a line containing | 
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| 79 | .B \-\^\- | 
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| 80 | between contiguous groups of matches. | 
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| 81 | .TP | 
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| 82 | .BI \-C " NUM" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-context=" NUM | 
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| 83 | Print | 
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| 84 | .I NUM | 
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| 85 | lines of output context. | 
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| 86 | Places a line containing | 
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| 87 | .B \-\^\- | 
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| 88 | between contiguous groups of matches. | 
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| 89 | .TP | 
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| 90 | .BR \-b ", " \-\^\-byte-offset | 
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| 91 | Print the byte offset within the input file before | 
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| 92 | each line of output. | 
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| 93 | .TP | 
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| 94 | .BI \-\^\-binary-files= TYPE | 
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| 95 | If the first few bytes of a file indicate that the file contains binary | 
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| 96 | data, assume that the file is of type | 
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| 97 | .IR TYPE . | 
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| 98 | By default, | 
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| 99 | .I TYPE | 
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| 100 | is | 
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| 101 | .BR binary , | 
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| 102 | and | 
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| 103 | .B grep | 
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| 104 | normally outputs either | 
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| 105 | a one-line message saying that a binary file matches, or no message if | 
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| 106 | there is no match. | 
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| 107 | If | 
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| 108 | .I TYPE | 
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| 109 | is | 
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| 110 | .BR without-match , | 
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| 111 | .B grep | 
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| 112 | assumes that a binary file does not match; this is equivalent to the | 
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| 113 | .B \-I | 
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| 114 | option. | 
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| 115 | If | 
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| 116 | .I TYPE | 
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| 117 | is | 
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| 118 | .BR text , | 
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| 119 | .B grep | 
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| 120 | processes a binary file as if it were text; this is equivalent to the | 
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| 121 | .B \-a | 
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| 122 | option. | 
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| 123 | .I Warning: | 
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| 124 | .B "grep \-\^\-binary-files=text" | 
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| 125 | might output binary garbage, | 
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| 126 | which can have nasty side effects if the output is a terminal and if the | 
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| 127 | terminal driver interprets some of it as commands. | 
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| 128 | .TP | 
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| 129 | .BI \-\^\-colour[=\fIWHEN\fR] ", " \-\^\-color[=\fIWHEN\fR] | 
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| 130 | Surround the matching string with the marker find in | 
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| 131 | .B GREP_COLOR | 
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| 132 | environment variable. WHEN may be `never', `always', or `auto' | 
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| 133 | .TP | 
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| 134 | .BR \-c ", " \-\^\-count | 
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| 135 | Suppress normal output; instead print a count of | 
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| 136 | matching lines for each input file. | 
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| 137 | With the | 
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| 138 | .BR \-v ", " \-\^\-invert-match | 
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| 139 | option (see below), count non-matching lines. | 
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| 140 | .TP | 
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| 141 | .BI \-D " ACTION" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-devices=" ACTION | 
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| 142 | If an input file is a device, FIFO or socket, use | 
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| 143 | .I ACTION | 
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| 144 | to process it.  By default, | 
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| 145 | .I ACTION | 
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| 146 | is | 
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| 147 | .BR read , | 
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| 148 | which means that devices are read just as if they were ordinary files. | 
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| 149 | If | 
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| 150 | .I ACTION | 
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| 151 | is | 
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| 152 | .BR skip , | 
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| 153 | devices are silently skipped. | 
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| 154 | .TP | 
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| 155 | .BI \-d " ACTION" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-directories=" ACTION | 
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| 156 | If an input file is a directory, use | 
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| 157 | .I ACTION | 
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| 158 | to process it.  By default, | 
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| 159 | .I ACTION | 
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| 160 | is | 
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| 161 | .BR read , | 
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| 162 | which means that directories are read just as if they were ordinary files. | 
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| 163 | If | 
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| 164 | .I ACTION | 
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| 165 | is | 
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| 166 | .BR skip , | 
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| 167 | directories are silently skipped. | 
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| 168 | If | 
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| 169 | .I ACTION | 
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| 170 | is | 
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| 171 | .BR recurse , | 
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| 172 | .B grep | 
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| 173 | reads all files under each directory, recursively; | 
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| 174 | this is equivalent to the | 
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| 175 | .B \-r | 
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| 176 | option. | 
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| 177 | .TP | 
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| 178 | .BR \-E ", " \-\^\-extended-regexp | 
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| 179 | Interpret | 
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| 180 | .I PATTERN | 
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| 181 | as an extended regular expression (see below). | 
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| 182 | .TP | 
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| 183 | .BI \-e " PATTERN" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-regexp=" PATTERN | 
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| 184 | Use | 
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| 185 | .I PATTERN | 
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| 186 | as the pattern; useful to protect patterns beginning with | 
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| 187 | .BR \- . | 
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| 188 | .TP | 
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| 189 | .BR \-F ", " \-\^\-fixed-strings | 
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| 190 | Interpret | 
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| 191 | .I PATTERN | 
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| 192 | as a list of fixed strings, separated by newlines, | 
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| 193 | any of which is to be matched. | 
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| 194 | .BR \-P ", " \-\^\-perl-regexp | 
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| 195 | Interpret | 
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| 196 | .I PATTERN | 
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| 197 | as a Perl regular expression. | 
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| 198 | .TP | 
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| 199 | .BI \-f " FILE" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-file=" FILE | 
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| 200 | Obtain patterns from | 
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| 201 | .IR FILE , | 
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| 202 | one per line. | 
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| 203 | The empty file contains zero patterns, and therefore matches nothing. | 
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| 204 | .TP | 
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| 205 | .BR \-G ", " \-\^\-basic-regexp | 
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| 206 | Interpret | 
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| 207 | .I PATTERN | 
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| 208 | as a basic regular expression (see below).  This is the default. | 
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| 209 | .TP | 
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| 210 | .BR \-H ", " \-\^\-with-filename | 
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| 211 | Print the filename for each match. | 
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| 212 | .TP | 
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| 213 | .BR \-h ", " \-\^\-no-filename | 
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| 214 | Suppress the prefixing of filenames on output | 
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| 215 | when multiple files are searched. | 
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| 216 | .TP | 
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| 217 | .B \-\^\-help | 
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| 218 | Output a brief help message. | 
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| 219 | .TP | 
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| 220 | .BR \-I | 
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| 221 | Process a binary file as if it did not contain matching data; this is | 
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| 222 | equivalent to the | 
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| 223 | .B \-\^\-binary-files=without-match | 
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| 224 | option. | 
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| 225 | .TP | 
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| 226 | .BR \-i ", " \-\^\-ignore-case | 
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| 227 | Ignore case distinctions in both the | 
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| 228 | .I PATTERN | 
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| 229 | and the input files. | 
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| 230 | .TP | 
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| 231 | .BR \-L ", " \-\^\-files-without-match | 
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| 232 | Suppress normal output; instead print the name | 
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| 233 | of each input file from which no output would | 
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| 234 | normally have been printed.  The scanning will stop | 
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| 235 | on the first match. | 
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| 236 | .TP | 
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| 237 | .BR \-l ", " \-\^\-files-with-matches | 
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| 238 | Suppress normal output; instead print | 
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| 239 | the name of each input file from which output | 
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| 240 | would normally have been printed.  The scanning will | 
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| 241 | stop on the first match. | 
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| 242 | .TP | 
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| 243 | .BI \-m " NUM" "\fR,\fP \-\^\-max-count=" NUM | 
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| 244 | Stop reading a file after | 
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| 245 | .I NUM | 
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| 246 | matching lines.  If the input is standard input from a regular file, | 
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| 247 | and | 
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| 248 | .I NUM | 
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| 249 | matching lines are output, | 
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| 250 | .B grep | 
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| 251 | ensures that the standard input is positioned to just after the last | 
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| 252 | matching line before exiting, regardless of the presence of trailing | 
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| 253 | context lines.  This enables a calling process to resume a search. | 
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| 254 | When | 
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| 255 | .B grep | 
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| 256 | stops after | 
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| 257 | .I NUM | 
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| 258 | matching lines, it outputs any trailing context lines.  When the | 
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| 259 | .B \-c | 
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| 260 | or | 
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| 261 | .B \-\^\-count | 
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| 262 | option is also used, | 
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| 263 | .B grep | 
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| 264 | does not output a count greater than | 
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| 265 | .IR NUM . | 
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| 266 | When the | 
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| 267 | .B \-v | 
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| 268 | or | 
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| 269 | .B \-\^\-invert-match | 
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| 270 | option is also used, | 
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| 271 | .B grep | 
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| 272 | stops after outputting | 
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| 273 | .I NUM | 
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| 274 | non-matching lines. | 
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| 275 | .TP | 
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| 276 | .B \-\^\-mmap | 
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| 277 | If possible, use the | 
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| 278 | .BR mmap (2) | 
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| 279 | system call to read input, instead of | 
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| 280 | the default | 
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| 281 | .BR read (2) | 
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| 282 | system call.  In some situations, | 
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| 283 | .B \-\^\-mmap | 
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| 284 | yields better performance.  However, | 
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| 285 | .B \-\^\-mmap | 
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| 286 | can cause undefined behavior (including core dumps) | 
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| 287 | if an input file shrinks while | 
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| 288 | .B grep | 
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| 289 | is operating, or if an I/O error occurs. | 
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| 290 | .TP | 
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| 291 | .BR \-n ", " \-\^\-line-number | 
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| 292 | Prefix each line of output with the line number | 
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| 293 | within its input file. | 
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| 294 | .TP | 
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| 295 | .BR \-o ", " \-\^\-only-matching | 
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| 296 | Show only the part of a matching line that matches | 
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| 297 | .I PATTERN. | 
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| 298 | .TP | 
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| 299 | .BI \-\^\-label= LABEL | 
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| 300 | Displays input actually coming from standard input as input coming from file | 
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| 301 | .I LABEL. | 
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| 302 | This is especially useful for tools like zgrep, e.g. | 
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| 303 | .B "gzip -cd foo.gz |grep --label=foo something" | 
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| 304 | .TP | 
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| 305 | .BR \-\^\-line-buffering | 
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| 306 | Use line buffering, it can be a performance penality. | 
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| 307 | .TP | 
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| 308 | .BR \-q ", " \-\^\-quiet ", " \-\^\-silent | 
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| 309 | Quiet; do not write anything to standard output. | 
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| 310 | Exit immediately with zero status if any match is found, | 
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| 311 | even if an error was detected. | 
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| 312 | Also see the | 
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| 313 | .B \-s | 
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| 314 | or | 
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| 315 | .B \-\^\-no-messages | 
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| 316 | option. | 
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| 317 | .TP | 
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| 318 | .BR \-R ", " \-r ", " \-\^\-recursive | 
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| 319 | Read all files under each directory, recursively; | 
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| 320 | this is equivalent to the | 
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| 321 | .B "\-d recurse" | 
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| 322 | option. | 
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| 323 | .TP | 
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| 324 | .BR "\fR \fP \-\^\-include=" PATTERN | 
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| 325 | Recurse in directories only searching file matching | 
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| 326 | .I PATTERN. | 
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| 327 | .TP | 
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| 328 | .BR "\fR \fP \-\^\-exclude=" PATTERN | 
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| 329 | Recurse in directories skip file matching | 
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| 330 | .I PATTERN. | 
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| 331 | .TP | 
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| 332 | .BR \-s ", " \-\^\-no-messages | 
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| 333 | Suppress error messages about nonexistent or unreadable files. | 
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| 334 | Portability note: unlike \s-1GNU\s0 | 
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| 335 | .BR grep , | 
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| 336 | traditional | 
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| 337 | .B grep | 
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| 338 | did not conform to \s-1POSIX.2\s0, because traditional | 
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| 339 | .B grep | 
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| 340 | lacked a | 
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| 341 | .B \-q | 
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| 342 | option and its | 
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| 343 | .B \-s | 
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| 344 | option behaved like \s-1GNU\s0 | 
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| 345 | .BR grep 's | 
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| 346 | .B \-q | 
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| 347 | option. | 
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| 348 | Shell scripts intended to be portable to traditional | 
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| 349 | .B grep | 
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| 350 | should avoid both | 
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| 351 | .B \-q | 
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| 352 | and | 
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| 353 | .B \-s | 
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| 354 | and should redirect output to /dev/null instead. | 
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| 355 | .TP | 
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| 356 | .BR \-U ", " \-\^\-binary | 
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| 357 | Treat the file(s) as binary.  By default, under MS-DOS and MS-Windows, | 
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| 358 | .BR grep | 
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| 359 | guesses the file type by looking at the contents of the first 32KB | 
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| 360 | read from the file.  If | 
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| 361 | .BR grep | 
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| 362 | decides the file is a text file, it strips the CR characters from the | 
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| 363 | original file contents (to make regular expressions with | 
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| 364 | .B ^ | 
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| 365 | and | 
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| 366 | .B $ | 
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| 367 | work correctly).  Specifying | 
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| 368 | .B \-U | 
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| 369 | overrules this guesswork, causing all files to be read and passed to the | 
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| 370 | matching mechanism verbatim; if the file is a text file with CR/LF | 
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| 371 | pairs at the end of each line, this will cause some regular | 
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| 372 | expressions to fail. | 
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| 373 | This option has no effect on platforms other than MS-DOS and | 
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| 374 | MS-Windows. | 
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| 375 | .TP | 
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| 376 | .BR \-u ", " \-\^\-unix-byte-offsets | 
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| 377 | Report Unix-style byte offsets.  This switch causes | 
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| 378 | .B grep | 
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| 379 | to report byte offsets as if the file were Unix-style text file, i.e. with | 
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| 380 | CR characters stripped off.  This will produce results identical to running | 
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| 381 | .B grep | 
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| 382 | on a Unix machine.  This option has no effect unless | 
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| 383 | .B \-b | 
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| 384 | option is also used; | 
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| 385 | it has no effect on platforms other than MS-DOS and MS-Windows. | 
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| 386 | .TP | 
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| 387 | .BR \-V ", " \-\^\-version | 
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| 388 | Print the version number of | 
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| 389 | .B grep | 
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| 390 | to standard error.  This version number should | 
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| 391 | be included in all bug reports (see below). | 
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| 392 | .TP | 
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| 393 | .BR \-v ", " \-\^\-invert-match | 
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| 394 | Invert the sense of matching, to select non-matching lines. | 
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| 395 | .TP | 
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| 396 | .BR \-w ", " \-\^\-word-regexp | 
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| 397 | Select only those lines containing matches that form whole words. | 
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| 398 | The test is that the matching substring must either be at the | 
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| 399 | beginning of the line, or preceded by a non-word constituent | 
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| 400 | character.  Similarly, it must be either at the end of the line | 
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| 401 | or followed by a non-word constituent character.  Word-constituent | 
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| 402 | characters are letters, digits, and the underscore. | 
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| 403 | .TP | 
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| 404 | .BR \-x ", " \-\^\-line-regexp | 
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| 405 | Select only those matches that exactly match the whole line. | 
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| 406 | .TP | 
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| 407 | .B \-y | 
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| 408 | Obsolete synonym for | 
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| 409 | .BR \-i . | 
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| 410 | .TP | 
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| 411 | .BR \-Z ", " \-\^\-null | 
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| 412 | Output a zero byte (the \s-1ASCII\s0 | 
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| 413 | .B NUL | 
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| 414 | character) instead of the character that normally follows a file name. | 
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| 415 | For example, | 
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| 416 | .B "grep \-lZ" | 
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| 417 | outputs a zero byte after each file name instead of the usual newline. | 
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| 418 | This option makes the output unambiguous, even in the presence of file | 
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| 419 | names containing unusual characters like newlines.  This option can be | 
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| 420 | used with commands like | 
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| 421 | .BR "find \-print0" , | 
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| 422 | .BR "perl \-0" , | 
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| 423 | .BR "sort \-z" , | 
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| 424 | and | 
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| 425 | .B "xargs \-0" | 
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| 426 | to process arbitrary file names, | 
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| 427 | even those that contain newline characters. | 
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| 428 | .SH "REGULAR EXPRESSIONS" | 
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| 429 | .PP | 
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| 430 | A regular expression is a pattern that describes a set of strings. | 
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| 431 | Regular expressions are constructed analogously to arithmetic | 
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| 432 | expressions, by using various operators to combine smaller expressions. | 
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| 433 | .PP | 
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| 434 | .B Grep | 
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| 435 | understands two different versions of regular expression syntax: | 
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| 436 | \*(lqbasic\*(rq and \*(lqextended.\*(rq  In | 
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| 437 | .RB "\s-1GNU\s0\ " grep , | 
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| 438 | there is no difference in available functionality using either syntax. | 
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| 439 | In other implementations, basic regular expressions are less powerful. | 
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| 440 | The following description applies to extended regular expressions; | 
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| 441 | differences for basic regular expressions are summarized afterwards. | 
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| 442 | .PP | 
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| 443 | The fundamental building blocks are the regular expressions that match | 
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| 444 | a single character.  Most characters, including all letters and digits, | 
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| 445 | are regular expressions that match themselves.  Any metacharacter with | 
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| 446 | special meaning may be quoted by preceding it with a backslash. | 
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| 447 | .PP | 
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| 448 | A | 
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| 449 | .I "bracket expression" | 
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| 450 | is a list of characters enclosed by | 
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| 451 | .B [ | 
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| 452 | and | 
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| 453 | .BR ] . | 
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| 454 | It matches any single | 
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| 455 | character in that list; if the first character of the list | 
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| 456 | is the caret | 
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| 457 | .B ^ | 
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| 458 | then it matches any character | 
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| 459 | .I not | 
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| 460 | in the list. | 
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| 461 | For example, the regular expression | 
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| 462 | .B [0123456789] | 
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| 463 | matches any single digit. | 
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| 464 | .PP | 
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| 465 | Within a bracket expression, a | 
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| 466 | .I "range expression" | 
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| 467 | consists of two characters separated by a hyphen. | 
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| 468 | It matches any single character that sorts between the two characters, | 
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| 469 | inclusive, using the locale's collating sequence and character set. | 
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| 470 | For example, in the default C locale, | 
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| 471 | .B [a\-d] | 
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| 472 | is equivalent to | 
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| 473 | .BR [abcd] . | 
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| 474 | Many locales sort characters in dictionary order, and in these locales | 
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| 475 | .B [a\-d] | 
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| 476 | is typically not equivalent to | 
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| 477 | .BR [abcd] ; | 
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| 478 | it might be equivalent to | 
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| 479 | .BR [aBbCcDd] , | 
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| 480 | for example. | 
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| 481 | To obtain the traditional interpretation of bracket expressions, | 
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| 482 | you can use the C locale by setting the | 
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| 483 | .B LC_ALL | 
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| 484 | environment variable to the value | 
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| 485 | .BR C . | 
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| 486 | .PP | 
|---|
| 487 | Finally, certain named classes of characters are predefined within | 
|---|
| 488 | bracket expressions, as follows. | 
|---|
| 489 | Their names are self explanatory, and they are | 
|---|
| 490 | .BR [:alnum:] , | 
|---|
| 491 | .BR [:alpha:] , | 
|---|
| 492 | .BR [:cntrl:] , | 
|---|
| 493 | .BR [:digit:] , | 
|---|
| 494 | .BR [:graph:] , | 
|---|
| 495 | .BR [:lower:] , | 
|---|
| 496 | .BR [:print:] , | 
|---|
| 497 | .BR [:punct:] , | 
|---|
| 498 | .BR [:space:] , | 
|---|
| 499 | .BR [:upper:] , | 
|---|
| 500 | and | 
|---|
| 501 | .BR [:xdigit:]. | 
|---|
| 502 | For example, | 
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| 503 | .B [[:alnum:]] | 
|---|
| 504 | means | 
|---|
| 505 | .BR [0\-9A\-Za\-z] , | 
|---|
| 506 | except the latter form depends upon the C locale and the | 
|---|
| 507 | \s-1ASCII\s0 character encoding, whereas the former is independent | 
|---|
| 508 | of locale and character set. | 
|---|
| 509 | (Note that the brackets in these class names are part of the symbolic | 
|---|
| 510 | names, and must be included in addition to the brackets delimiting | 
|---|
| 511 | the bracket list.)  Most metacharacters lose their special meaning | 
|---|
| 512 | inside lists.  To include a literal | 
|---|
| 513 | .B ] | 
|---|
| 514 | place it first in the list.  Similarly, to include a literal | 
|---|
| 515 | .B ^ | 
|---|
| 516 | place it anywhere but first.  Finally, to include a literal | 
|---|
| 517 | .B \- | 
|---|
| 518 | place it last. | 
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| 519 | .PP | 
|---|
| 520 | The period | 
|---|
| 521 | .B . | 
|---|
| 522 | matches any single character. | 
|---|
| 523 | The symbol | 
|---|
| 524 | .B \ew | 
|---|
| 525 | is a synonym for | 
|---|
| 526 | .B [[:alnum:]] | 
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| 527 | and | 
|---|
| 528 | .B \eW | 
|---|
| 529 | is a synonym for | 
|---|
| 530 | .BR [^[:alnum]] . | 
|---|
| 531 | .PP | 
|---|
| 532 | The caret | 
|---|
| 533 | .B ^ | 
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| 534 | and the dollar sign | 
|---|
| 535 | .B $ | 
|---|
| 536 | are metacharacters that respectively match the empty string at the | 
|---|
| 537 | beginning and end of a line. | 
|---|
| 538 | The symbols | 
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| 539 | .B \e< | 
|---|
| 540 | and | 
|---|
| 541 | .B \e> | 
|---|
| 542 | respectively match the empty string at the beginning and end of a word. | 
|---|
| 543 | The symbol | 
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| 544 | .B \eb | 
|---|
| 545 | matches the empty string at the edge of a word, | 
|---|
| 546 | and | 
|---|
| 547 | .B \eB | 
|---|
| 548 | matches the empty string provided it's | 
|---|
| 549 | .I not | 
|---|
| 550 | at the edge of a word. | 
|---|
| 551 | .PP | 
|---|
| 552 | A regular expression may be followed by one of several repetition operators: | 
|---|
| 553 | .PD 0 | 
|---|
| 554 | .TP | 
|---|
| 555 | .B ? | 
|---|
| 556 | The preceding item is optional and matched at most once. | 
|---|
| 557 | .TP | 
|---|
| 558 | .B * | 
|---|
| 559 | The preceding item will be matched zero or more times. | 
|---|
| 560 | .TP | 
|---|
| 561 | .B + | 
|---|
| 562 | The preceding item will be matched one or more times. | 
|---|
| 563 | .TP | 
|---|
| 564 | .BI { n } | 
|---|
| 565 | The preceding item is matched exactly | 
|---|
| 566 | .I n | 
|---|
| 567 | times. | 
|---|
| 568 | .TP | 
|---|
| 569 | .BI { n ,} | 
|---|
| 570 | The preceding item is matched | 
|---|
| 571 | .I n | 
|---|
| 572 | or more times. | 
|---|
| 573 | .TP | 
|---|
| 574 | .BI { n , m } | 
|---|
| 575 | The preceding item is matched at least | 
|---|
| 576 | .I n | 
|---|
| 577 | times, but not more than | 
|---|
| 578 | .I m | 
|---|
| 579 | times. | 
|---|
| 580 | .PD | 
|---|
| 581 | .PP | 
|---|
| 582 | Two regular expressions may be concatenated; the resulting | 
|---|
| 583 | regular expression matches any string formed by concatenating | 
|---|
| 584 | two substrings that respectively match the concatenated | 
|---|
| 585 | subexpressions. | 
|---|
| 586 | .PP | 
|---|
| 587 | Two regular expressions may be joined by the infix operator | 
|---|
| 588 | .BR | ; | 
|---|
| 589 | the resulting regular expression matches any string matching | 
|---|
| 590 | either subexpression. | 
|---|
| 591 | .PP | 
|---|
| 592 | Repetition takes precedence over concatenation, which in turn | 
|---|
| 593 | takes precedence over alternation.  A whole subexpression may be | 
|---|
| 594 | enclosed in parentheses to override these precedence rules. | 
|---|
| 595 | .PP | 
|---|
| 596 | The backreference | 
|---|
| 597 | .BI \e n\c | 
|---|
| 598 | \&, where | 
|---|
| 599 | .I n | 
|---|
| 600 | is a single digit, matches the substring | 
|---|
| 601 | previously matched by the | 
|---|
| 602 | .IR n th | 
|---|
| 603 | parenthesized subexpression of the regular expression. | 
|---|
| 604 | .PP | 
|---|
| 605 | In basic regular expressions the metacharacters | 
|---|
| 606 | .BR ? , | 
|---|
| 607 | .BR + , | 
|---|
| 608 | .BR { , | 
|---|
| 609 | .BR | , | 
|---|
| 610 | .BR ( , | 
|---|
| 611 | and | 
|---|
| 612 | .BR ) | 
|---|
| 613 | lose their special meaning; instead use the backslashed | 
|---|
| 614 | versions | 
|---|
| 615 | .BR \e? , | 
|---|
| 616 | .BR \e+ , | 
|---|
| 617 | .BR \e{ , | 
|---|
| 618 | .BR \e| , | 
|---|
| 619 | .BR \e( , | 
|---|
| 620 | and | 
|---|
| 621 | .BR \e) . | 
|---|
| 622 | .PP | 
|---|
| 623 | Traditional | 
|---|
| 624 | .B egrep | 
|---|
| 625 | did not support the | 
|---|
| 626 | .B { | 
|---|
| 627 | metacharacter, and some | 
|---|
| 628 | .B egrep | 
|---|
| 629 | implementations support | 
|---|
| 630 | .B \e{ | 
|---|
| 631 | instead, so portable scripts should avoid | 
|---|
| 632 | .B { | 
|---|
| 633 | in | 
|---|
| 634 | .B egrep | 
|---|
| 635 | patterns and should use | 
|---|
| 636 | .B [{] | 
|---|
| 637 | to match a literal | 
|---|
| 638 | .BR { . | 
|---|
| 639 | .PP | 
|---|
| 640 | \s-1GNU\s0 | 
|---|
| 641 | .B egrep | 
|---|
| 642 | attempts to support traditional usage by assuming that | 
|---|
| 643 | .B { | 
|---|
| 644 | is not special if it would be the start of an invalid interval | 
|---|
| 645 | specification.  For example, the shell command | 
|---|
| 646 | .B "egrep '{1'" | 
|---|
| 647 | searches for the two-character string | 
|---|
| 648 | .B {1 | 
|---|
| 649 | instead of reporting a syntax error in the regular expression. | 
|---|
| 650 | \s-1POSIX.2\s0 allows this behavior as an extension, but portable scripts | 
|---|
| 651 | should avoid it. | 
|---|
| 652 | .SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" | 
|---|
| 653 | Grep's behavior is affected by the following environment variables. | 
|---|
| 654 | .PP | 
|---|
| 655 | A locale | 
|---|
| 656 | .BI LC_ foo | 
|---|
| 657 | is specified by examining the three environment variables | 
|---|
| 658 | .BR LC_ALL , | 
|---|
| 659 | .BR LC_\fIfoo\fP , | 
|---|
| 660 | .BR LANG , | 
|---|
| 661 | in that order. | 
|---|
| 662 | The first of these variables that is set specifies the locale. | 
|---|
| 663 | For example, if | 
|---|
| 664 | .B LC_ALL | 
|---|
| 665 | is not set, but | 
|---|
| 666 | .B LC_MESSAGES | 
|---|
| 667 | is set to | 
|---|
| 668 | .BR pt_BR , | 
|---|
| 669 | then Brazilian Portuguese is used for the | 
|---|
| 670 | .B LC_MESSAGES | 
|---|
| 671 | locale. | 
|---|
| 672 | The C locale is used if none of these environment variables are set, | 
|---|
| 673 | or if the locale catalog is not installed, or if | 
|---|
| 674 | .B grep | 
|---|
| 675 | was not compiled with national language support (\s-1NLS\s0). | 
|---|
| 676 | .TP | 
|---|
| 677 | .B GREP_OPTIONS | 
|---|
| 678 | This variable specifies default options to be placed in front of any | 
|---|
| 679 | explicit options.  For example, if | 
|---|
| 680 | .B GREP_OPTIONS | 
|---|
| 681 | is | 
|---|
| 682 | .BR "'\-\^\-binary-files=without-match \-\^\-directories=skip'" , | 
|---|
| 683 | .B grep | 
|---|
| 684 | behaves as if the two options | 
|---|
| 685 | .B \-\^\-binary-files=without-match | 
|---|
| 686 | and | 
|---|
| 687 | .B \-\^\-directories=skip | 
|---|
| 688 | had been specified before any explicit options. | 
|---|
| 689 | Option specifications are separated by whitespace. | 
|---|
| 690 | A backslash escapes the next character, | 
|---|
| 691 | so it can be used to specify an option containing whitespace or a backslash. | 
|---|
| 692 | .TP | 
|---|
| 693 | .B GREP_COLOR | 
|---|
| 694 | Specifies the marker for highlighting. | 
|---|
| 695 | .TP | 
|---|
| 696 | \fBLC_ALL\fP, \fBLC_COLLATE\fP, \fBLANG\fP | 
|---|
| 697 | These variables specify the | 
|---|
| 698 | .B LC_COLLATE | 
|---|
| 699 | locale, which determines the collating sequence used to interpret | 
|---|
| 700 | range expressions like | 
|---|
| 701 | .BR [a\-z] . | 
|---|
| 702 | .TP | 
|---|
| 703 | \fBLC_ALL\fP, \fBLC_CTYPE\fP, \fBLANG\fP | 
|---|
| 704 | These variables specify the | 
|---|
| 705 | .B LC_CTYPE | 
|---|
| 706 | locale, which determines the type of characters, e.g., which | 
|---|
| 707 | characters are whitespace. | 
|---|
| 708 | .TP | 
|---|
| 709 | \fBLC_ALL\fP, \fBLC_MESSAGES\fP, \fBLANG\fP | 
|---|
| 710 | These variables specify the | 
|---|
| 711 | .B LC_MESSAGES | 
|---|
| 712 | locale, which determines the language that | 
|---|
| 713 | .B grep | 
|---|
| 714 | uses for messages. | 
|---|
| 715 | The default C locale uses American English messages. | 
|---|
| 716 | .TP | 
|---|
| 717 | .B POSIXLY_CORRECT | 
|---|
| 718 | If set, | 
|---|
| 719 | .B grep | 
|---|
| 720 | behaves as \s-1POSIX.2\s0 requires; otherwise, | 
|---|
| 721 | .B grep | 
|---|
| 722 | behaves more like other \s-1GNU\s0 programs. | 
|---|
| 723 | \s-1POSIX.2\s0 requires that options that follow file names must be | 
|---|
| 724 | treated as file names; by default, such options are permuted to the | 
|---|
| 725 | front of the operand list and are treated as options. | 
|---|
| 726 | Also, \s-1POSIX.2\s0 requires that unrecognized options be diagnosed as | 
|---|
| 727 | \*(lqillegal\*(rq, but since they are not really against the law the default | 
|---|
| 728 | is to diagnose them as \*(lqinvalid\*(rq. | 
|---|
| 729 | .B POSIXLY_CORRECT | 
|---|
| 730 | also disables \fB_\fP\fIN\fP\fB_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_\fP, | 
|---|
| 731 | described below. | 
|---|
| 732 | .TP | 
|---|
| 733 | \fB_\fP\fIN\fP\fB_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_\fP | 
|---|
| 734 | (Here | 
|---|
| 735 | .I N | 
|---|
| 736 | is | 
|---|
| 737 | .BR grep 's | 
|---|
| 738 | numeric process ID.)  If the | 
|---|
| 739 | .IR i th | 
|---|
| 740 | character of this environment variable's value is | 
|---|
| 741 | .BR 1 , | 
|---|
| 742 | do not consider the | 
|---|
| 743 | .IR i th | 
|---|
| 744 | operand of | 
|---|
| 745 | .B grep | 
|---|
| 746 | to be an option, even if it appears to be one. | 
|---|
| 747 | A shell can put this variable in the environment for each command it runs, | 
|---|
| 748 | specifying which operands are the results of file name wildcard | 
|---|
| 749 | expansion and therefore should not be treated as options. | 
|---|
| 750 | This behavior is available only with the \s-1GNU\s0 C library, and only | 
|---|
| 751 | when | 
|---|
| 752 | .B POSIXLY_CORRECT | 
|---|
| 753 | is not set. | 
|---|
| 754 | .SH DIAGNOSTICS | 
|---|
| 755 | .PP | 
|---|
| 756 | Normally, exit status is 0 if selected lines are found and 1 otherwise. | 
|---|
| 757 | But the exit status is 2 if an error occurred, unless the | 
|---|
| 758 | .B \-q | 
|---|
| 759 | or | 
|---|
| 760 | .B \-\^\-quiet | 
|---|
| 761 | or | 
|---|
| 762 | .B \-\^\-silent | 
|---|
| 763 | option is used and a selected line is found. | 
|---|
| 764 | .SH BUGS | 
|---|
| 765 | .PP | 
|---|
| 766 | Email bug reports to | 
|---|
| 767 | .BR bug-grep@gnu.org . | 
|---|
| 768 | .PP | 
|---|
| 769 | Large repetition counts in the | 
|---|
| 770 | .BI { n , m } | 
|---|
| 771 | construct may cause grep to use lots of memory. | 
|---|
| 772 | In addition, | 
|---|
| 773 | certain other obscure regular expressions require exponential time | 
|---|
| 774 | and space, and may cause | 
|---|
| 775 | .B grep | 
|---|
| 776 | to run out of memory. | 
|---|
| 777 | .PP | 
|---|
| 778 | Backreferences are very slow, and may require exponential time. | 
|---|
| 779 | .\" Work around problems with some troff -man implementations. | 
|---|
| 780 | .br | 
|---|