How to grep a string in a directory and all its subdirectories? [duplicate] - linux

This question already has answers here:
How do I recursively grep all directories and subdirectories?
(26 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
How to grep a string or a text in a directory and all its subdirectories'files in LINUX ??

If your grep supports -R, do:
grep -R 'string' dir/
If not, then use find:
find dir/ -type f -exec grep -H 'string' {} +

grep -r -e string directory
-r is for recursive; -e is optional but its argument specifies the regex to search for. Interestingly, POSIX grep is not required to support -r (or -R), but I'm practically certain that System V grep did, so in practice they (almost) all do. Some versions of grep support -R as well as (or conceivably instead of) -r; AFAICT, it means the same thing.

Related

linux : listing files that contain several words

I try to find a way to list all the files in the directory tree (recursively) that contain several words.
While searching I found example such as egrep -R -l 'toto|tata' . but | induce OR. I would like AND...
Thank you for your help
Using GNU grep with GNU xargs,
grep -ERl 'toto' | xargs -r grep 'tata'
The first grep lists those files containing the pattern toto which is then fed to xargs and with the second grep those files containing tata is retrieved. The -r flag is to ensure second grep doesn't run on an empty output.
The -r flag in xargs from the man page,
-r, --no-run-if-empty
If the standard input does not contain any nonblanks, do not run the command.
Normally, the command is run once even if there is no input. This option is a GNU
extension.
agrep tool is designed for providing AND to grep with usage:
agrep 'pattern1;pattern2' file
In your case you could run
find . -type f -exec agrep 'toto;tata' {} \; #apply -l to display the file names
PS1: For current directory you can just agrep 'pattern1;pattern2' *.*
PS2: Unfortunatelly agrep does not support -R option.

Error: "grep: Argument list too long" [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How can I grep while avoiding 'Too many arguments' [duplicate]
(5 answers)
Closed 7 years ago.
I am trying to run the following command, but gets argument too long error. Can you help?.
HOST# grep -rl 'pattern' /home/*/public_html/*
-bash: /bin/grep: Argument list too long
Is there a way to override this error and grep the pattern matching files I want in all users public_html directory. There are around 500+ users in the same server.
Use find
find /home/*/public_html -type f -exec grep -l 'pattern' {} +
The + modifier makes it group the filenames in manageable chunks.
However, you can do it with grep -r. The arguments to this should be the directory names, not filenames.
grep -rl 'pattern' /home/*/public_html
This will just have 500+ arguments, not thousands of filenames.

Remove files not containing a specific string

I want to find the files not containing a specific string (in a directory and its sub-directories) and remove those files. How I can do this?
The following will work:
find . -type f -print0 | xargs --null grep -Z -L 'my string' | xargs --null rm
This will firstly use find to print the names of all the files in the current directory and any subdirectories. These names are printed with a null terminator rather than the usual newline separator (try piping the output to od -c to see the effect of the -print0 argument.
Then the --null parameter to xargs tells it to accept null-terminated inputs. xargs will then call grep on a list of filenames.
The -Z argument to grep works like the -print0 argument to find, so grep will print out its results null-terminated (which is why the final call to xargs needs a --null option too). The -L argument to grep causes grep to print the filenames of those files on its command line (that xargs has added) which don't match the regular expression:
my string
If you want simple matching without regular expression magic then add the -F option. If you want more powerful regular expressions then give a -E argument. It's a good habit to use single quotes rather than double quotes as this protects you against any shell magic being applied to the string (such as variable substitution)
Finally you call xargs again to get rid of all the files that you've found with the previous calls.
The problem with calling grep directly from the find command with the -exec argument is that grep then gets invoked once per file rather than once for a whole batch of files as xargs does. This is much faster if you have lots of files. Also don't be tempted to do stuff like:
rm $(some command that produces lots of filenames)
It's always better to pass it to xargs as this knows the maximum command-line limits and will call rm multiple times each time with as many arguments as it can.
Note that this solution would have been simpler without the need to cope with files containing white space and new lines.
Alternatively
grep -r -L -Z 'my string' . | xargs --null rm
will work too (and is shorter). The -r argument to grep causes it to read all files in the directory and recursively descend into any subdirectories). Use the find ... approach if you want to do some other tests on the files as well (such as age or permissions).
Note that any of the single letter arguments, with a single dash introducer, can be grouped together (for instance as -rLZ). But note also that find does not use the same conventions and has multi-letter arguments introduced with a single dash. This is for historical reasons and hasn't ever been fixed because it would have broken too many scripts.
GNU grep and bash.
grep -rLZ "$str" . | while IFS= read -rd '' x; do rm "$x"; done
Use a find solution if portability is needed. This is slightly faster.
EDIT: This is how you SHOULD NOT do this! Reason is given here. Thanks to #ormaaj for pointing it out!
find . -type f | grep -v "exclude string" | xargs rm
Note: grep pattern will match against full file path from current directory (see find . -type f output)
One possibility is
find . -type f '!' -exec grep -q "my string" {} \; -exec echo rm {} \;
You can remove the echo if the output of this preview looks correct.
The equivalent with -delete is
find . -type f '!' -exec grep -q "user_id" {} \; -delete
but then you don't get the nice preview option.
To remove files not containing a specific string:
Bash:
To use them, enable the extglob shell option as follows:
shopt -s extglob
And just remove all files that don't have the string "fix":
rm !(*fix*)
If you want to don't delete all the files that don't have the names "fix" and "class":
rm !(*fix*|*class*)
Zsh:
To use them, enable the extended glob zsh shell option as follows:
setopt extended_glob
Remove all files that don't have the string, in this example "fix":
rm -- ^*fix*
If you want to don't delete all the files that don't have the names "fix" and "class":
rm -- ^(*fix*|*class*)
It's possible to use it for extensions, you only need to change the regex: (.zip) , (.doc), etc.
Here are the sources:
https://www.tecmint.com/delete-all-files-in-directory-except-one-few-file-extensions/
https://codeday.me/es/qa/20190819/1296122.html
I can think of a few ways to approach this. Here's one: find and grep to generate a list of files with no match, and then xargs rm them.
find yourdir -type f -exec grep -F -L 'yourstring' '{}' + | xargs -d '\n' rm
This assumes GNU tools (grep -L and xargs -d are non-portable) and of course no filenames with newlines in them. It has the advantage of not running grep and rm once per file, so it'll be reasonably fast. I recommend testing it with "echo" in place of "rm" just to make sure it picks the right files before you unleash the destruction.
This worked for me, you can remove the -f if you're okay with deleting directories.
myString="keepThis"
for x in `find ./`
do if [[ -f $x && ! $x =~ $myString ]]
then rm $x
fi
done
Another solution (although not as fast). The top solution didn't work in my case because the string I needed to use in place of 'my string' has special characters.
find -type f ! -name "*my string*" -exec rm {} \; -print

How to copy the top 10 most recent files from one directory to another?

Al my html files reside here :
/home/thinkcode/myfiles/html/
I want to move the newest 10 files to /home/thinkcode/Test
I have this so far. Please correct me. I am looking for a one-liner!
ls -lt *.htm | head -10 | awk '{print "cp "$1" "..\Test\$1}' | sh
ls -lt *.htm | head -10 | awk '{print "cp " $9 " ../Test/"$9}' | sh
cp seems to understand back-ticked commands. So you could use a command like this one to copy the 10 latest files to another folder like e.g. /test:
cp `ls -t *.htm | head -10` /test
Here is a version which doesn't use ls. It should be less vulnerable to strange characters in file names:
find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name '*.html' -print0
\| xargs -0 stat --printf "%Y\t%n\n"
\| sort -n
\| tail -n 10
\| cut -f 2
\| xargs cp -t ../Test/
I used find for a couple of reasons:
1) if there are too many files in a directory, bash will balk at the wildcard expansion*.
2) Using the -print0 argument to find gets around the problem of bash expanding whitespace in a filename in to multiple tokens.
* Actually, bash shares a memory buffer for its wildcard expansion and its environment variables, so it's not strictly a function of the number of file names, but rather the total length of the file names and environment variables. Too many environment variables => no wildcard expansion.
EDIT: Incorporated some of #glennjackman's improvements. Kept the initial use of find to avoid the use of the wildcard expansion which might fail in a large directory.
ls -lt *.html | head -10 | awk '{print $NF}' | xargs -i cp {} DestDir
In the above example DestDir is the destination directory for the copy.
Add -t after xargs to see the commands as they execute. I.e., xargs -i -t cp {} DestDir.
For more information check out the xargs command.
EDIT: As pointed out by #DennisWilliamson (and also checking the current man page) re the -i option This option is deprecated; use -I instead..
Also, both solutions presented depend on the filenames in questions don't contain any blanks or tabs.

How do I recursively grep all directories and subdirectories?

How do I recursively grep all directories and subdirectories?
find . | xargs grep "texthere" *
grep -r "texthere" .
The first parameter represents the regular expression to search for, while the second one represents the directory that should be searched. In this case, . means the current directory.
Note: This works for GNU grep, and on some platforms like Solaris you must specifically use GNU grep as opposed to legacy implementation. For Solaris this is the ggrep command.
If you know the extension or pattern of the file you would like, another method is to use --include option:
grep -r --include "*.txt" texthere .
You can also mention files to exclude with --exclude.
Ag
If you frequently search through code, Ag (The Silver Searcher) is a much faster alternative to grep, that's customized for searching code. For instance, it's recursive by default and automatically ignores files and directories listed in .gitignore, so you don't have to keep passing the same cumbersome exclude options to grep or find.
I now always use (even on Windows with GoW -- Gnu on Windows):
grep --include="*.xxx" -nRHI "my Text to grep" *
(As noted by kronen in the comments, you can add 2>/dev/null to void permission denied outputs)
That includes the following options:
--include=PATTERN
Recurse in directories only searching file matching PATTERN.
-n, --line-number
Prefix each line of output with the line number within its input file.
(Note: phuclv adds in the comments that -n decreases performance a lot so, so you might want to skip that option)
-R, -r, --recursive
Read all files under each directory, recursively; this is equivalent to the -d recurse option.
-H, --with-filename
Print the filename for each match.
-I
Process a binary file as if it did not contain matching data;
this is equivalent to the --binary-files=without-match option.
And I can add 'i' (-nRHIi), if I want case-insensitive results.
I can get:
/home/vonc/gitpoc/passenger/gitlist/github #grep --include="*.php" -nRHI "hidden" *
src/GitList/Application.php:43: 'git.hidden' => $config->get('git', 'hidden') ? $config->get('git', 'hidden') : array(),
src/GitList/Provider/GitServiceProvider.php:21: $options['hidden'] = $app['git.hidden'];
tests/InterfaceTest.php:32: $options['hidden'] = array(self::$tmpdir . '/hiddenrepo');
vendor/klaussilveira/gitter/lib/Gitter/Client.php:20: protected $hidden;
vendor/klaussilveira/gitter/lib/Gitter/Client.php:170: * Get hidden repository list
vendor/klaussilveira/gitter/lib/Gitter/Client.php:176: return $this->hidden;
...
Also:
find ./ -type f -print0 | xargs -0 grep "foo"
but grep -r is a better answer.
globbing **
Using grep -r works, but it may overkill, especially in large folders.
For more practical usage, here is the syntax which uses globbing syntax (**):
grep "texthere" **/*.txt
which greps only specific files with pattern selected pattern. It works for supported shells such as Bash +4 or zsh.
To activate this feature, run: shopt -s globstar.
See also: How do I find all files containing specific text on Linux?
git grep
For projects under Git version control, use:
git grep "pattern"
which is much quicker.
ripgrep
For larger projects, the quickest grepping tool is ripgrep which greps files recursively by default:
rg "pattern" .
It's built on top of Rust's regex engine which uses finite automata, SIMD and aggressive literal optimizations to make searching very fast. Check the detailed analysis here.
In POSIX systems, you don't find -r parameter for grep and your grep -rn "stuff" . won't run, but if you use find command it will:
find . -type f -exec grep -n "stuff" {} \; -print
Agreed by Solaris and HP-UX.
If you only want to follow actual directories, and not symbolic links,
grep -r "thingToBeFound" directory
If you want to follow symbolic links as well as actual directories (be careful of infinite recursion),
grep -R "thing to be found" directory
Since you're trying to grep recursively, the following options may also be useful to you:
-H: outputs the filename with the line
-n: outputs the line number in the file
So if you want to find all files containing Darth Vader in the current directory or any subdirectories and capture the filename and line number, but do not want the recursion to follow symbolic links, the command would be
grep -rnH "Darth Vader" .
If you want to find all mentions of the word cat in the directory
/home/adam/Desktop/TomAndJerry
and you're currently in the directory
/home/adam/Desktop/WorldDominationPlot
and you want to capture the filename but not the line number of any instance of the string "cats", and you want the recursion to follow symbolic links if it finds them, you could run either of the following
grep -RH "cats" ../TomAndJerry #relative directory
grep -RH "cats" /home/adam/Desktop/TomAndJerry #absolute directory
Source:
running "grep --help"
A short introduction to symbolic links, for anyone reading this answer and confused by my reference to them:
https://www.nixtutor.com/freebsd/understanding-symbolic-links/
To find name of files with path recursively containing the particular string use below command
for UNIX:
find . | xargs grep "searched-string"
for Linux:
grep -r "searched-string" .
find a file on UNIX server
find . -type f -name file_name
find a file on LINUX server
find . -name file_name
just the filenames can be useful too
grep -r -l "foo" .
another syntax to grep a string in all files on a Linux system recursively
grep -irn "string"
the -r indicates a recursive search that searches for the specified string in the given directory and sub directory looking for the specified string in files, program, etc
-i ingnore case sensitive can be used to add inverted case string
-n prints the line number of the specified string
NB: this prints massive result to the console so you might need to filter the output by piping and remove less interesting bits of info it also searches binary programs so you might want to filter some of the results
ag is my favorite way to do this now github.com/ggreer/the_silver_searcher . It's basically the same thing as ack but with a few more optimizations.
Here's a short benchmark. I clear the cache before each test (cf https://askubuntu.com/questions/155768/how-do-i-clean-or-disable-the-memory-cache )
ryan#3G08$ sync && echo 3 | sudo tee /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
3
ryan#3G08$ time grep -r "hey ya" .
real 0m9.458s
user 0m0.368s
sys 0m3.788s
ryan#3G08:$ sync && echo 3 | sudo tee /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
3
ryan#3G08$ time ack-grep "hey ya" .
real 0m6.296s
user 0m0.716s
sys 0m1.056s
ryan#3G08$ sync && echo 3 | sudo tee /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
3
ryan#3G08$ time ag "hey ya" .
real 0m5.641s
user 0m0.356s
sys 0m3.444s
ryan#3G08$ time ag "hey ya" . #test without first clearing cache
real 0m0.154s
user 0m0.224s
sys 0m0.172s
This should work:
grep -R "texthere" *
If you are looking for a specific content in all files from a directory structure, you may use find since it is more clear what you are doing:
find -type f -exec grep -l "texthere" {} +
Note that -l (downcase of L) shows the name of the file that contains the text. Remove it if you instead want to print the match itself. Or use -H to get the file together with the match. All together, other alternatives are:
find -type f -exec grep -Hn "texthere" {} +
Where -n prints the line number.
This is the one that worked for my case on my current machine (git bash on windows 7):
find ./ -type f -iname "*.cs" -print0 | xargs -0 grep "content pattern"
I always forget the -print0 and -0 for paths with spaces.
EDIT: My preferred tool is now instead ripgrep: https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep/releases . It's really fast and has better defaults (like recursive by default). Same example as my original answer but using ripgrep: rg -g "*.cs" "content pattern"
grep -r "texthere" . (notice period at the end)
(^credit: https://stackoverflow.com/a/1987928/1438029)
Clarification:
grep -r "texthere" / (recursively grep all directories and subdirectories)
grep -r "texthere" . (recursively grep these directories and subdirectories)
grep recursive
grep [options] PATTERN [FILE...]
[options]
-R, -r, --recursive
Read all files under each directory, recursively.
This is equivalent to the -d recurse or --directories=recurse option.
http://linuxcommand.org/man_pages/grep1.html
grep help
$ grep --help
$ grep --help |grep recursive
-r, --recursive like --directories=recurse
-R, --dereference-recursive
Alternatives
ack (http://beyondgrep.com/)
ag (http://github.com/ggreer/the_silver_searcher)
Throwing my two cents here. As others already mentioned grep -r doesn't work on every platform. This may sound silly but I always use git.
git grep "texthere"
Even if the directory is not staged, I just stage it and use git grep.
Below are the command for search a String recursively on Unix and Linux environment.
for UNIX command is:
find . -name "string to be searched" -exec grep "text" "{}" \;
for Linux command is:
grep -r "string to be searched" .
In 2018, you want to use ripgrep or the-silver-searcher because they are way faster than the alternatives.
Here is a directory with 336 first-level subdirectories:
% find . -maxdepth 1 -type d | wc -l
336
% time rg -w aggs -g '*.py'
...
rg -w aggs -g '*.py' 1.24s user 2.23s system 283% cpu 1.222 total
% time ag -w aggs -G '.*py$'
...
ag -w aggs -G '.*py$' 2.71s user 1.55s system 116% cpu 3.651 total
% time find ./ -type f -name '*.py' | xargs grep -w aggs
...
find ./ -type f -name '*.py' 1.34s user 5.68s system 32% cpu 21.329 total
xargs grep -w aggs 6.65s user 0.49s system 32% cpu 22.164 total
On OSX, this installs ripgrep: brew install ripgrep. This installs silver-searcher: brew install the_silver_searcher.
In my IBM AIX Server (OS version: AIX 5.2), use:
find ./ -type f -print -exec grep -n -i "stringYouWannaFind" {} \;
this will print out path/file name and relative line number in the file like:
./inc/xxxx_x.h
2865: /** Description : stringYouWannaFind */
anyway,it works for me : )
For a list of available flags:
grep --help
Returns all matches for the regexp texthere in the current directory, with the corresponding line number:
grep -rn "texthere" .
Returns all matches for texthere, starting at the root directory, with the corresponding line number and ignoring case:
grep -rni "texthere" /
flags used here:
-r recursive
-n print line number with output
-i ignore case
Note that find . -type f | xargs grep whatever sorts of solutions will run into "Argument list to long" errors when there are too many files matched by find.
The best bet is grep -r but if that isn't available, use find . -type f -exec grep -H whatever {} \; instead.
I guess this is what you're trying to write
grep myText $(find .)
and this may be something else helpful if you want to find the files grep hit
grep myText $(find .) | cut -d : -f 1 | sort | uniq
For .gz files, recursively scan all files and directories
Change file type or put *
find . -name \*.gz -print0 | xargs -0 zgrep "STRING"
Just for fun, a quick and dirty search of *.txt files if the #christangrant answer is too much to type :-)
grep -r texthere .|grep .txt
Here's a recursive (tested lightly with bash and sh) function that traverses all subfolders of a given folder ($1) and using grep searches for given string ($3) in given files ($2):
$ cat script.sh
#!/bin/sh
cd "$1"
loop () {
for i in *
do
if [ -d "$i" ]
then
# echo entering "$i"
cd "$i"
loop "$1" "$2"
fi
done
if [ -f "$1" ]
then
grep -l "$2" "$PWD/$1"
fi
cd ..
}
loop "$2" "$3"
Running it and an example output:
$ sh script start_folder filename search_string
/home/james/start_folder/dir2/filename
Get the first matched files from grep command and get all the files don't contain some word, but input files for second grep comes from result files of first grep command.
grep -l -r --include "*.js" "FIRSTWORD" * | xargs grep "SECONDwORD"
grep -l -r --include "*.js" "FIRSTWORD" * | xargs grep -L "SECONDwORD"
dc0fd654-37df-4420-8ba5-6046a9dbe406
grep -l -r --include "*.js" "SEARCHWORD" * | awk -F'/' '{print $NF}' | xargs -I{} sh -c 'echo {}; grep -l -r --include "*.html" -w --include=*.js -e {} *; echo '''
5319778a-cec2-444d-bcc4-53d33821fedb

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