NAME¶
glark - Search text files for complex regular expressions
SYNOPSIS¶
glark [options] expression file ...
DESCRIPTION¶
Similar to "grep", "glark" offers: Perl-compatible regular
expressions, color highlighting of matches, context around matches, complex
expressions ("and" and "or"), grep output emulation, and
automatic exclusion of non-text files. Its regular expressions should be
familiar to persons experienced in Perl, Python, or Ruby. File may also be a
list of files in the form of a path.
OPTIONS¶
Input
- -0[nnn]
- Use \nnn (octal) as the input record separator. If nnn is
omitted, use '\n\n' as the record separator, which treats paragraphs as
lines.
- -d ACTION, --directories=ACTION
- Directories are processed according to the given
ACTION, which by default is "read". If ACTION is
"recurse", each file in the directory is read and each
subdirectory is recursed into (equivalent to the "-r" option).
If ACTION is "skip", directories are not read, and no
message is produced.
- --binary-files=TYPE
- Specify how to handle binary files, thus overriding the
default behavior, which is to denote the binary files that match the
expression, without displaying the match. TYPE may be one of:
"binary", the default; "without-match", which results
in binary files being skipped; and "text", which results in the
binary file being treated as text, the display of which may have bad side
effects with the terminal. Note that the default behavior has changed;
this previously was to skip binary files. The same effect may be achieved
by setting binary-files to "without-match" in the
~/.glarkrc file.
- --[with-]basename EXPR, --[with-]name
EXPR
- Search only files whose names match the given regular
expression. As in find(1), this works on the basename of the file.
This expression can be negated and modified with "!" and
"i", such as '!/io\.[hc]$/i'.
- --[with-]fullname EXPR, --[with-]path
EXPR
- Search only files whose names, including path, match the
given regular expression. As in find(1), this works on the path of
the file. This expression can be negated and modified with "!"
and "i", such as '!/Dialog.*\.java$/i'.
- --without-basename EXPR, --without-name
EXPR
- Do not search files with base names matching the given
regular expression.
- --without-fullname EXPR, --without-path
EXPR
- Do not search files with full names matching the given
regular expression.
- -M, --exclude-matching
- Do not search files whose names match the given expression.
This can be useful for finding external references to a file, or to a
class (assuming that class names match file names).
- -r, --recurse
- Recurse through directories. Equivalent to
--directories=read.
- --split-as-path(=VALUE),
--no-split-as-path
- Sets whether, if a command line argument includes the path
separator (such as ":"), the argument should be split by the
path separator. This functionality is useful for using environment
variables as input, such as $PATH and $CLASSPATH, which are automatically
split and processed as a list of files and directories. The default value
of this option is "true". "--no-split-as-path" is
equivalent to "--split-as-path=false".
- --size-limit=SIZE
- If provided, files no larger than SIZE bytes
will be searched. This is useful when running the "--recurse"
option on directories that may contain large files.
Matching
- -a NUM expr1 expr2
- --and NUM expr1 expr2
- --and=NUM expr1 expr2
- ( expr1 --and=NUM expr2 )
- Match both of the two expressions, within NUM lines
of each other. See the EXPRESSIONS section for more information.
- -b NUM[%], --before NUM[%]
- Restrict the search to before the given location, which
represents either the number of the last line within the valid range, or
the percentage of lines to be searched.
- --after NUM[%]
- Restrict the search to after the given section, which
represents either the number of the first line within the valid range, or
the percentage of lines to be skipped.
- -f FILE, --file=FILE
- Use the lines in the given file as expressions. Each line
consists of a regular expression.
- -i, --ignore-case
- Match regular expressions without regard to case. The
default is case sensitive.
- -m NUM, --match-limit NUM
- Find only the first NUM matches in each file.
- -o expr1 expr2
- --or expr1 expr2
- ( expr1 --or expr2 )
- Match either of the two expressions. See the EXPRESSIONS
section for more information.
- -R, --range NUM[%],NUM[%]
- Restrict the search to the given range of lines, as either
line numbers or a percentage of the length of the file.
- -v, --invert-match
- Show lines that do not match the expression.
- -w, --word, --word-regexp
- Put word boundaries around each pattern, thus matching only
where the full word(s) occur in the text. Thus, "glark -w Foo"
is the same as "glark '/\bFoo\b/'".
- -x, --line-regexp
- Select only where the entire line matches the
pattern(s).
- --xor expr1 expr2
- ( expr1 --xor expr2 )
- Match either of the two expressions, but not both. See the
EXPRESSIONS section for more information.
Output
- -A NUM, --after-context=NUM
- Print NUM lines after a matched expression.
- -B NUM, --before-context=NUM
- Print NUM lines before a matched expression.
- -C [NUM], -NUM, --context[=NUM]
- Output NUM lines of context around a matched
expression. The default is no context. If no NUM is given for this
option, the number of lines of context is 2.
- -c, --count
- Instead of normal output, display only the number of
matches in each file.
- -F, --file-color COLOR
- Specify the highlight color for file names. See the
HIGHLIGHTING section for the values that can be used.
- --no-filter
- Display the entire file(s), presumably with matches
highlighted.
- -g, --grep
- Produce output like the grep default: file names, no line
numbers, and a single line of the match, which will be the first line for
matches that span multiple lines. If the EMACS environment variable is
set, this value is set to true. Thus, running glark under Emacs results in
the output format expected by Emacs.
- -h, --no-filename
- Do not display the names of the files that matched.
- -H, --with-filename
- Display the names of the files that matched. This is the
default behavior.
- -l, --files-with-matches
- Print only the names of the file that matched the
expression.
- -L, --files-without-match
- Print only the names of the file that did not match the
expression.
- --label=NAME
- Use NAME as output file name. This is useful when reading
from standard input.
- -n, --line-number
- Display the line numbers. This is the default
behavior.
- -N, --no-line-number
- Do not display the line numbers.
- --line-number-color
- Specify the highlight color for line numbers. This defaults
to none (no highlighting). See the HIGHLIGHTING section for more
information.
- -T, --text-color COLOR
- Specify the highlight color for text. See the HIGHLIGHTING
section for more information.
- --text-color-NUM COLOR
- Specify the highlight color for the regular expression
capture NUM. Colors are used by regular expressions in the order they are
created (that is, with the "--and" and "--or" option),
or with captures within a regular expression (such as
'/(this)⎪(that)/'). is See the HIGHLIGHTING section for more
information.
- -u, --highlight=[FORMAT]
- Enable highlighting. This is the default behavior. Format
is "single" (one color) or "multi" (different color
per regular expression). See the HIGHLIGHTING section for more
information.
- -U, --no-highlight
- Disable highlighting.
- -y, --extract-matches
- Display only the region that matched, not the entire line.
If the expression contains "backreferences" (i.e., expressions
bounded by "( ... )"), then only the portion captured will be
displayed, not the entire line. This option is useful with "-g",
which eliminates the default highlighting and display of file names.
- -Z, --null
- When in -l mode, write file names followed by the
ASCII NUL character ('\0') instead of '\n'.
Debugging/Errors
- -?, --help
- Display the help message.
- --config
- Display the settings glark is using, and exit. Since this
is run after configuration files are read, this may be useful for
determining values of configuration parameters.
- --explain
- Write the expression in a more legible format, useful for
debugging.
- -q, -s, --quiet,
--no-messages
- Suppress warnings.
- -Q, --no-quiet
- Enable warnings. This is the default.
- -V, --version
- Display version information.
- --verbose
- Display normally suppressed output, for debugging
purposes.
EXPRESSIONS¶
Regular Expressions
Regular expressions are expected to be in the Perl/Ruby format. "perldoc
perlre" has more general information. The expression may be of either
form:
something
/something/
There is no difference between the two forms, except that with the latter, one
can provide the "ignore case" modifier, thus matching
"someThing" and "SoMeThInG":
% glark /something/i
Note that this is redundant with the "-i" ("--ignore-case")
option.
All regular expression characters and options are available, such as
"\w", ".*?" and "[^9]". For example:
% glark '\b[a-z][^\d]\d{1,3}.*\s*>>\s*\d+\s*.*& +\d{3}'
If the
and and
or options are not used, the last non-option is
considered to be the expression to be matched. In the following,
"printf" is used as the expression.
% glark -w printf *.c
POSIX character classes (e.g., [[:alpha:]]) are also supported.
Complex Expressions
Complex expressions combine regular expressions (and complex expressions
themselves) with logical AND, OR, and XOR operators. Both prefix and infix
notation is supported.
- -o expr1 expr2
- --or expr1 expr2 --end-of-or
- ( expr1 --or expr2 )
- Match either of the two expressions. The results of the two
forms are equivalent. In the latter syntax, the --end-of-or is
optional.
- -a number expr1 expr2
- --and=number expr1 expr2 --end-of-and
- ( expr1 --and number expr2 )
- Match both of the two expressions, within <number>
lines of each other. As with the "or" option, the results of the
two forms are equivalent, and the "--end-of-and" is optional.
The forms "-aNUM" and "--and=NUM" are also supported.
If the number provided is -1 (negative one), the distance is considered to
be "infinite", and thus, the condition is satisfied if both
expressions match within the same file.
If the number provided is 0 (zero), the condition is satisfied if both
expressions match on the same line.
If the --and option is used, and the follow argument is not numeric, then
the value defaults to zero.
A warning will be issued if the value given in the number position does not
appear to be numeric.
- --xor expr1 expr2 --end-of-xor
- ( expr1 --xor expr2 )
- Match either of the two expressions, but not both.
"--end-of-xor" is optional.
Negated Regular Expressions
Regular expressions can be negated, by being prefixed with '!', and using the
'/' quote characters around the expression, such as:
!/expr/
This has the effect of "match anything other than this". For a single
expression, this is no different than the -v/--invert-match option, but it can
be useful in complex expressions, such as:
--and 0 this '!/that/'
which means "match and line that has "this", but not
"that".
HIGHLIGHTING¶
Matching patterns and file names can be highlighted using ANSI escape sequences.
Both the foreground and the background colors may be specified, from the
following:
black
blue
cyan
green
magenta
red
white
yellow
The foreground may have any number of the following modifiers applied:
blink
bold
concealed
reverse
underline
underscore
The format is "MODIFIERS FOREGROUND on BACKGROUND". For example:
red
black on yellow (the default for patterns)
reverse bold (the default for file names)
green on white
bold underline red on cyan
By default text is highlighted as black on yellow. File names are written in
reversed bold text.
EXAMPLES¶
Basic Usage
- % glark format *.h
- Searches for "format" in the local .h files.
- % glark --ignore-case format *.h
- Searches for "format" without regard to case.
Short form:
% glark -i format *.h
- % glark --context=6 format *.h
- Produces 6 lines of context around any match for
"format". Short forms:
% glark -C 6 format *.h
% glark -6 format *.h
- % glark --exclude-matching Object *.java
- Find references to "Object", excluding the files
whose names match "Object". Thus, SessionBean.java would be
searched; EJBObject.java would not. Short form:
% glark -M Object *.java
- % glark --grep --extract-matches
'\w+\.printStackTrace\(.*\)' *.java
- Show where exceptions are dumped. Note that the
"--grep" option is used, thus turning off highlighting and
display of file names. If the "--no-filename" option is used,
the output will consist of only the matching portions. The short form of
this command is:
% glark -gy '\w+\.printStackTrace\(.*\)' *.java
- % glark --grep --extract-matches
'(\w+)\.printStackTrace\(.*\)' *.java
- Show only the variable name of exceptions that are dumped.
Short form:
% glark -gy '(\w+)\.printStackTrace\(.*\)' *.java
- % who ⎪ glark -gy '^(\S+)\s+\S+\s*May 15'
- Display only the names of users who logged in today.
- % glark -l '\b\w{25,}\b' *.txt
- Display (only) the names of the text files that contain
"words" at least 25 characters long.
- % glark --files-without-match '"\w+"'
- Display (only) the names of the files that do not contain
strings consisting of a single word. Short form:
% glark -L '"\w+"'
- % for i in *.jar; do jar tvf $i ⎪
glark --LABEL=$i Exception; done
- Search the files for 'Exception', displaying the jar file
name instead of the standard input marker ('-').
Highlighting
- % glark --text-color "red on white"
'\b[[:digit:]]{5}\b' *.c
- Display (in red text on a white background) occurrences of
exactly 5 digits. Short form:
% glark -T "red on white" '\b\d{5}\b' *.c
See the HIGHLIGHTING section for valid colors and modifiers.
Complex Expressions
- % glark --or format print *.h
- Searches for either "printf" or
"format". Short form:
% glark -o format print *.h
- % glark --and 4 printf format *.c *.h
- Searches for both "printf" or "format"
within 4 lines of each other. Short form:
% glark -a 4 printf format *.c *.h
- % glark --context=3 --and 0 printf format *.c
- Searches for both "printf" or "format"
on the same line ("within 0 lines of each other"). Three lines
of context are displayed around any matches. Short form:
% glark -3 -a 0 printf format *.c
- % glark -8 -i -a 15 -a 2 pthx '\.\.\.' -o 'va_\w+t' die
*.c
- (In order of the options:) Produces 8 lines of context
around case insensitive matches of ("phtx" within 2 lines of
'...' (literal)) within 15 lines of (either "va_\w+t" or
"die").
- % glark --and -1 '#define\s+YIELD' '#define\s+dTHR'
*.h
- Looks for "#define\s+YIELD" within the same file
(-1 == "infinite distance") of "#define\s+dTHR". Short
form:
% glark -a -1 '#define\s+YIELD' '#define\s+dTHR' *.h
Range Limiting
- % glark --before 50% cout *.cpp
- Find references to "cout", within the first half
of the file. Short form:
% glark -b 50% cout *.cpp
- % glark --after 20 cout *.cpp
- Find references to "cout", starting at the 20th
line in the file. Short form:
% glark -b 50% cout *.cpp
- % glark --range 20 50% cout *.cpp
- Find references to "cout", in the first half of
the file, after the 20th line. Short form:
% glark -R 20 50% cout *.cpp
File Processing
- % glark -r print .
- Search for "print" in all files at and below the
current directory.
- % glark --fullname='/\.java$/' -r println org
- Search for "println" in all Java files at and
below the "org" directory.
- % glark --basename='!/CVS/' -r '\b\d\d:\d\d:\d\d\b'
.
- Search for a time pattern in all files without
"CVS" in their basenames.
- % glark --size-limit=1024 -r main -r .
- Search for "main" in files no larger than 1024
bytes.
ENVIRONMENT¶
- GLARKOPTS
- A string of whitespace-delimited options. Due to parsing
constraints, should probably not contain complex regular expressions.
- $HOME/.glarkrc
- A resource file, containing name/value pairs, separated by
either ':' or '='. The valid fields of a .glarkrc file are as follows,
with example values:
after-context: 1
before-context: 6
context: 5
file-color: blue on yellow
highlight: off
ignore-case: false
quiet: yes
text-color: bold reverse
line-number-color: bold
verbose: false
grep: true
"yes" and "on" are synonymnous with "true".
"no" and "off" signify "false".
My ~/.glarkrc file is the following:
file-color: bold reverse
text-color: bold black on yellow
context: 2
highlight: on
verbose: false
ignore-case: false
quiet: yes
word: false
binary-files: without-match
- local .glarkrc
- See the local-config-files field below:
Fields
- after-context
- See the "--after-context" option. For example,
for 3 lines of context after the match:
after-context: 3
- basename
- See the "--basename" option. For example, to omit
Subversion directories:
basename: !/\.svn/
- before-context
- See the "--before-context" option. For example,
for 7 lines of context before the match:
before-context: 7
- binary-files
- See the "--binary-files" option. For example, to
skip binary files:
binary-files: without-match
- context
- See the "--context" option. For example, for 2
lines before and after matches:
context: 2
- expression
- See the EXPRESSION section. Example:
expression: --or '^\s*public\s+class\s+\w+' '^\s*\w+\(
- file-color
- See the "--file-color" option. For example, for
white on black:
file-color: white on black
- filter
- See the "--filter" option. For example, to show
the entire file:
filter: false
- fullname
- See the "--fullname" and "--basename"
options. For example, to omit CVS files:
fullname: !/\bCVS\b/
- grep
- See the "--grep" option. For example, to always
run in grep mode:
grep: true
- highlight
- See the "--highlight" option. To turn off
highlighting:
highlight: false
- ignore-case
- See the "--ignore-case" option. To make matching
case-insensitive:
ignore-case: true
- known-nontext-files
- The extensions of files that should be considered to always
be nontext (binary). If a file extension is not known, the file contents
are examined for nontext characters. Thus, setting this field can result
in faster searches. Example:
known-nontext-files: class exe dll com
See the Exclusion of Non-Text Files section in NOTES for the
default settings.
- known-text-files
- The extensions of files that should be considered to always
be text. See above for more. Example:
known-text-files: ini bat xsl xml
See the Exclusion of Non-Text Files section in NOTES for the
default settings.
- local-config-files
- By default, glark uses only the configuration file
~/.glarkrc. Enabling this makes glark search upward from the current
directory for the first .glarkrc file.
This can be used, for example, in a Java project, where .class files are
binary, versus a PHP project, where .class files are text:
/home/me/.glarkrc
local-config-files: true
/home/me/projects/java/.glarkrc
known-nontext-files: class
/home/me/projects/php/.glarkrc
known-text-files: class
With this configuration, .class files will automatically be treated as
binary file in Java projects, and .class files will be treated as text.
This can speed up searches.
Note that the configuration file ~/.glarkrc is read first, so the local
configuration file can override those settings.
- quiet
- See the "--quiet" option.
- show-break
- Whether to display breaks between sections, when displaying
context. Example:
show-break: true
By default, this is false.
- text-color
- See the "--text-color" option. Example:
text-color: bold blue on white
- verbose
- See the "--verbose" option. Example:
verbose: true
- verbosity
- See the "--verbosity" option. Example:
verbosity: 4
NOTES¶
Exclusion of Non-Text Files
Non-text files are automatically skipped, by taking a sample of the file and
checking for an excessive number of non-ASCII characters. For speed purposes,
this test is skipped for files whose suffixes are associated with text files:
c
cpp
css
h
f
for
fpp
hpp
html
java
mk
php
pl
pm
rb
rbw
txt
Similarly, this test is also skipped for files whose suffixes are associated
with non-text (binary) files:
Z
a
bz2
elc
gif
gz
jar
jpeg
jpg
o
obj
pdf
png
ps
tar
zip
See the "known-text-files" and "known-nontext-files" fields
for denoting file name suffixes to associate as text or nontext.
Exit Status
The exit status is 0 if matches were found; 1 if no matches were found, and 2 if
there was an error. An inverted match (the -v/--invert-match option) will
result in 1 for matches found, 0 for none found.
SEE ALSO¶
For regular expressions, the "perlre" man page.
Mastering Regular Expressions, by Jeffrey Friedl, published by O'Reilly.
CAVEATS¶
"Unbalanced" leading and trailing slashes will result in those slashes
being included as characters in the regular expression. Thus, the following
pairs are equivalent:
/foo "/foo"
/foo\/ "/foo/"
/foo\/i "/foo/i"
foo/ "foo/"
foo/ "foo/"
The code to detect nontext files assumes ASCII, not Unicode.
AUTHOR¶
Jeff Pace <jpace at incava dot org>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (c) 2006, Jeff Pace.
All Rights Reserved. This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
and/or modified under the terms of the Lesser GNU Public License. See
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl.html for more information.