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GREP(1) General Commands Manual GREP(1)

grep, egrep, fgrep, zgrep, zegrep, zfgrepfile pattern searcher

grep [-abcEFGHhIiLlnoqRsUVvwxZ] [-A num] [-B num] [-C[num]] [-e pattern] [-f file] [-m num] [--binary-files=value] [--context[=num]] [--label=name] [--line-buffered] [pattern] [file ...]

The grep utility searches any given input files, selecting lines that match one or more patterns. By default, a pattern matches an input line if the regular expression (RE) in the pattern matches the input line without its trailing newline. An empty expression matches every line. Each input line that matches at least one of the patterns is written to the standard output. If no file arguments are specified, the standard input is used.

grep is used for simple patterns and basic regular expressions (BREs); egrep can handle extended regular expressions (EREs). See re_format(7) for more information on regular expressions. fgrep is quicker than both grep and egrep, but can only handle fixed patterns (i.e. it does not interpret regular expressions). Patterns may consist of one or more lines, allowing any of the pattern lines to match a portion of the input.

zgrep, zegrep, and zfgrep act like grep, egrep, and fgrep, respectively, but accept input files compressed with the compress(1) or gzip(1) compression utilities.

The following options are available:

num
Print num lines of trailing context after each match. See also the -B and -C options.
Treat all files as ASCII text. Normally grep will simply print “Binary file ... matches” if files contain binary characters. Use of this option forces grep to output lines matching the specified pattern.
num
Print num lines of leading context before each match. See also the -A and -C options.
Each output line is preceded by its position (in bytes) in the file. If option -o is also specified, the position of the matched pattern is displayed.
[num], --context[=num]
Print num lines of leading and trailing context surrounding each match. The default is 2 and is equivalent to -A 2 -B 2. Note: no whitespace may be given between the option and its argument.
Only a count of selected lines is written to standard output.
Interpret pattern as an extended regular expression (i.e. force grep to behave as egrep).
pattern
Specify a pattern used during the search of the input: an input line is selected if it matches any of the specified patterns. This option is most useful when multiple -e options are used to specify multiple patterns, or when a pattern begins with a dash (‘-’).
Interpret pattern as a set of fixed strings (i.e. force grep to behave as fgrep).
file
Read one or more newline separated patterns from file. Empty pattern lines match every input line. Newlines are not considered part of a pattern. If file is empty, nothing is matched.
Interpret pattern as a basic regular expression (i.e. force grep to behave as traditional grep).
Always print filename headers (i.e. filenames) with output lines.
Never print filename headers (i.e. filenames) with output lines.
Ignore binary files.
Perform case insensitive matching. By default, grep is case sensitive.
Only the names of files not containing selected lines are written to standard output. Pathnames are listed once per file searched. If the standard input is searched, the string “(standard input)” is written.
Only the names of files containing selected lines are written to standard output. grep will only search a file until a match has been found, making searches potentially less expensive. Pathnames are listed once per file searched. If the standard input is searched, the string “(standard input)” is written.
num
Stop after num matches.
Each output line is preceded by its relative line number in the file, starting at line 1. The line number counter is reset for each file processed. This option is ignored if -c, -L, -l, or -q is specified.
Print each match, but only the match, not the entire line.
Quiet mode: suppress normal output. grep will only search a file until a match has been found, making searches potentially less expensive.
Recursively search subdirectories listed. If no file is given, grep searches the current working directory.
Silent mode. Nonexistent and unreadable files are ignored (i.e. their error messages are suppressed).
Search binary files, but do not attempt to print them.
Display version information. All other options are ignored.
Selected lines are those matching any of the specified patterns.
The expression is searched for as a word (as if surrounded by ‘[[:<:]]’ and ‘[[:>:]]’; see re_format(7)).
Only input lines selected against an entire fixed string or regular expression are considered to be matching lines.
Force grep to behave as zgrep.
=value
Controls searching and printing of binary files. Options are binary, the default: search binary files but do not print them; without-match: do not search binary files; and text: treat all files as text.
=name
Print name instead of the filename before lines.
Force output to be line buffered. By default, output is line buffered when standard output is a terminal and block buffered otherwise.

The grep utility exits with one of the following values:

One or more lines were selected.
No lines were selected.
An error occurred.

To find all occurrences of the word ‘patricia’ in a file:

$ grep 'patricia' myfile

To find all occurrences of the pattern ‘.Pp’ at the beginning of a line:

$ grep '^\.Pp' myfile

The apostrophes ensure the entire expression is evaluated by grep instead of by the user's shell. The caret ‘^’ matches the null string at the beginning of a line, and the ‘\’ escapes the ‘.’, which would otherwise match any character.

To find all lines in a file which do not contain the words ‘foo’ or ‘bar’:

$ grep -v -e 'foo' -e 'bar' myfile

A simple example of an extended regular expression:

$ egrep '19|20|25' calendar

Peruses the file ‘calendar’ looking for either 19, 20, or 25.

ed(1), ex(1), gzip(1), sed(1), re_format(7)

The grep utility is compliant with the IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”) specification.

The flags [-AaBbCGHhILmoRUVwZ] are extensions to that specification, and the behaviour of the -f flag when used with an empty pattern file is left undefined.

All long options are provided for compatibility with GNU versions of this utility.

Historic versions of the grep utility also supported the flags [-ruy]. This implementation supports those options; however, their use is strongly discouraged.

The grep command first appeared in Version 4 AT&T UNIX.

December 3, 2019 OpenBSD-6.7