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SGREP(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
SGREP(1) |
sgrep - search a file for a structured pattern
sgrep [-aCcDdhilNnPqSsTtV] [-O filename] [-o
"format"] [-p preprocessor] [-e]
expression [filename ...]
sgrep [-aCcDdhilNnPqSsTtV] [-O
filename] [-o "format"] [ -p
preprocessor] -f filename [-e
expression] [filename ...]
sgrep -h
sgrep (structured grep) is a tool for searching text files and
filtering text streams using structural criteria. The data model of
sgrep is based on regions, which are non-empty substrings of text.
Regions are typically occurrences of constant strings or meaningful
text elements, which are recognizable through some delimiting strings. Regions
can be arbitrarily long, arbitrarily overlapping, and arbitrarily nested.
sgrep uses patterns called region expressions to
express which regions of the input text are output to standard output. The
selection of regions is based on mutual containment and ordering
conditions of the regions, expressed by the region expression.
Region expressions are read by default first from file
$HOME/.sgreprc, or if it doesn't exist, from file
/usr/local/share/sgreprc, and then from the command line. Different
behavior can be specified through command line options.
Input files are processed one by one (i.e., regions cannot
extend over file boundaries), except if the -S flag is given, in
which case sgrep takes the concatenation of the input files as its
input text. If no input files are given, sgrep reads the standard
input. Standard input can also be specified as an input file by giving
hyphen '-' as a file name.
The selected regions are output in increasing order of their start
positions. If several output regions overlap, a minimal region that covers
them all is output, by default, instead of outputting each of them
separately.
- -a
- Act as a filter: display the maching regions, possibly formatted according
to the output format, interleaved with the rest of the text. (See the
description of option -o below.)
- -C
- Display copyright notice.
- -c
- Display only the count of the regions that match the expression.
- -D
- Display verbose progress output. NOTE: This is used for debugging
purposes only and may not function in future versions of sgrep.
- -d
- Display each matching region once, even if the regions overlap or
nest.
- -e expression
- Search the input text for occurrences of expression.
- -f file
- Read the region expression from the named file. Filename - refers
to stdin.
- -h
- Display a short help.
- -i
- Ignore case distinctions in phrases.
- -l
- Long output format: precede each output region by a line which indicates
the ordinal number of the region, the name of the file where the region
starts, the length of the region in bytes, the start and end positions of
the region within the entire input text, the start position of the region
within the file containing the start, and the end position of the region
within the file containing the end.
- -N
- Do not add a newline after the last output region.
- -n
- Suppress reading $HOME/.sgreprc or /usr/lib/sgreprc.
- -O file
- Read the output format from file. See the description of output formats
below.
- -o format
- Set the output format. The format is displayed for each output region with
any occurrences of the following place holders substituted:
- %f
- name of the file containing the start of the region
- %s
- start position of the region
- %e
- end position of the region
- %l
- length of the region in bytes (i.e., %e-%s+1)
- %i
- start position of the region in the file where the region begins
- %j
- end position of the region in the file where the region ends
- %r
- text of the region. "%r" is the default output format.
- %n
- gets the ordinal number of the region
- -P
- Display the (preprocessed) region expression without executing it.
- -p preprocessor
- Apply preprocessor to the region expression before evaluating
it.
- -S
- Stream mode. With this option sgrep considers it's input files as a
continuous stream, so that regions may extend across file boundaries.
sgrep -S file_1 ... file_n
is similar to
cat file_1 ... file_n | sgrep
except that the latter creates a temporary disk file of the
input stream. Sgrep may use much more memory when run with the -S
option, since then it cannot release its internal region lists between
processing each file.
- -s
- Short output format (default): do not format the text of the output
regions, and display overlapping parts of regions only once.
- -T
- Display statistics about the execution.
- -t
- Display time usage.
- -V
- Display version information.
- --
- No more options.
A list of options can be given also as the value of the
environment variable SGREPOPT.
region_expr -> basic_expr
| operator_expr
operator_expr -> region_expr ['not'] 'in' basic_expr
| region_expr ['not'] 'containing' basic_expr
| region_expr ['not'] 'equal' basic_expr
| region_expr 'or' basic_expr
| region_expr 'extracting' basic_expr
| region_expr '..' basic_expr
| region_expr '_.' basic_expr
| region_expr '._' basic_expr
| region_expr '__' basic_expr
| region_expr 'quote' basic_expr
| region_expr '_quote' basic_expr
| region_expr 'quote_' basic_expr
| region_expr '_quote_' basic_expr
| 'concat' '(' region_expr ')'
| 'inner' '(' region_expr ')'
| 'outer' '(' region_expr ')'
| 'join' '(' integer ',' region_expr ')'
basic_expr -> phrase
| 'start'
| 'end'
| 'chars'
| constant_list
| '(' region_expr ')'
phrase -> '"' char [ char ... ] '"'
constant_list -> '[' ']' | '[' regions ']'
regions -> region
| region regions
region -> '(' integer ',' integer ')'
Note that region expressions are left-associative. This means, for
example, that an expression
'"<a>".."</a>" or "</b>"'
evaluates to the regions starting with
"<a>" and ending with
"</a>", or comprising only the
string "</b>". In order to obtain
the regions that begin with "<a>"
and end with either "</a>" or
"</b>", one should indicate the
proper order of evaluation using parentheses:
"<a>".. ("</a>" or "</b>")
Expressions can also contain comments, which start with '#'
and extend to the end of the line. However, a '#'-sign in a phrase does not
begin a comment.
The value of an expression is a set of regions of input text that satisfy the
expression.
Value v(basic_expr) of a basic expression:
- v(phrase):=
- the set of regions of input text whose text equals the text of the
phrase.
- v('start'):=
- a set consisting of single-character regions for the first position of
each input file. If the -S option is given, the value is a set containing
a single region that comprises the first character in the input
stream.
- v('end'):=
- a set consisting of single-character regions for the last position of each
input file. If the -S option is given, the value is a set containing a
single region that comprises the last character in the input stream.
- v('chars'):=
- a set consisting of all single-character regions.
- v([ ]):=
- an empty set.
- v([(s_1,e_1) (s_1,e_2) ... (s_n,e_n)]):=
- a set consisting of regions r_i for each i = 1,...,n, where
the start position of region r_i is s_i and its end
position is e_i. The positions have to be nonnegative integers,
and the regions have to be given in increasing order of their start
positions; regions with a common start positions have to be given in
increasing order of their end positions. The positions are counted from
the first character of each input file, unless the -S option is given, in
which case the positions are counted starting from the beginning of the
input stream. The number of the first position in a file or a stream is
zero.
- v('('region_expr')'):= v(region_expr).
Value v(operator_expr) of operator expressions:
- v(region_expr 'in' basic_expr):=
- the set of the regions in v(region_expr) that are contained in
some region in v(basic_expr). A region x is contained in
another region y if and only if the start position of x is
greater than the start position of y and the end position of
x is not greater than the end position of y, or the end
position of x is smaller than the end position of y and the
start position of x is not smaller than the start position of
y.
- v(region_expr 'not' 'in' basic_expr):=
- the set of the regions in v(region_expr) that are not contained in
any region in v(basic_expr).
- v(region_expr 'containing' basic_expr):=
- the set of the regions in v(region_expr) that contain some region
in v(basic_expr).
- v(region_expr 'not' 'containing' basic_expr):=
- the set of the regions in v(region_expr) that do not contain any
region in v(basic_expr).
- v(region_expr 'equal' basic_expr):=
- The set of regions, which occur in both v(region_expr) and
v(basic_expr).
- v(region_expr 'not equal' basic_expr):=
- The set of regions, which occur in v(region_expr) but do not occur
in v(basic_expr).
- v(region_expr 'or' basic_expr):=
- the set of the regions that appear in v(region_expr) or in
v(basic_expr) or in both.
- v(region_expr 'extracting' basic_expr):=
- the set of the non-empty regions that are formed of the regions in
v(region_expr) by extracting an overlap with any region in
v(basic_expr). For example, the value of
'[(1,4) (3,6) (7,9)] extracting [(2,5) (4,7)]'
consists of the regions (1,1) and (8,9).
- v(region_expr '..' basic_expr):
- The value of this expression consists of the regions that can be formed by
pairing regions from v(region_expr) with regions from
v(basic_expr). The pairing is defined as a generalization of the
way how nested parentheses are paired together "from inside
out". For this we need to be able to compare the order of regions,
which may be overlapping and nested. This ordering is defined as follows.
Let x and y be two regions. We say that region
x precedes region y if the end position of x
is smaller than the start position of y. We say that region
x is later than region y if the end position of
x is greater than the end position of y, or if they end
at the same position and the start of x is greater than the
start of y. Region x is earlier than region y
if the start position of x is smaller than the start
position of y, or if they start at the same position and the end
position of x is less than the end position of y. Now a
region x from v(region_expr) and a region y from
v(basic_expr) are paired in expression v(region_expr '..'
basic_expr) if and only if
- 1.
- x precedes y,
- 2.
- x is not paired with any region from v(basic_expr) which
is earlier than y, and
- 3.
- y is not paired with any region from v(region_expr) which
is later than x.
The pairing of regions x and y forms a region that
extends from the start position of x to the end position of
y.
- v(region_expr '._' basic_expr):
- The pairing of the regions from v(region_expr) and the regions
from v(basic_expr) is defined similarly to v(region_expr '..'
basic_expr) above, except that the pairing of regions x and
y now forms a region which extends from the start position of x
to the position immediately preceding the start of y.
- v(region_expr '_.' basic_expr):=
- The pairing of the regions from v(region_expr) and the regions
from v(basic_expr) is defined similarly to v(region_expr '..'
basic_expr) above, except that the pairing of regions x and
y now forms a region which extends from the position immediately
following the end position of x to the end position of
y.
- v(region_expr '__' basic_expr):=
- The pairing of the regions from v(region_expr) and the regions
from v(basic_expr) is defined similarly to v(region_expr '..'
basic_expr) above, except that now the pairing of regions x and
y forms a region which extends from the text position immediately
following the end of x to the text position immediately preceding
the start of y. Possibly resulting empty regions are excluded from
the result.
- v(region_expr 'quote' basic_expr):
- The value of this expression consists of the regions that extend from the
start position of a "left-quote region" in
v(region_expr) to the end position of a corresponding
"right-quote region" in v(basic_expr). The regions
in the result are non-nesting and non-overlapping. The left-quote regions
and the right-quote regions are defined as follows:
- The earliest region (see above) in v(region_expr) is a possible
left-quote region.
- For each possible left-quote region x, the earliest region in
v(basic_expr) preceeded by x is its right-quote region.
- For each right-quote region y in v(basic_expr), the earliest
region in v(region_expr) preceeded by y is a possible
left-quote region.
The below example query finds C-style non-nesting comments:
"/*" quote "*/"
The below example query finds strings between quotation marks:
"\"" quote "\""
(Notice the difference to expression "\"" ..
"\"", which would evaluate to any substring of input text
that starts with a quotation mark and ends with the next quotation
mark.)
The variants _quote, quote_ and _quote_ are
analogical to the operators _., ._ and __, in the sense
that the "quote regions" originating from the expression on the
side of the underscore _ are excluded from the result regions. (In
the case of _quote_ any possibly resulting empty regions are excluded
from the result.)
- v('concat' '(' region_expr ')' ):=
- the set of the longest regions of input text that are covered by the
regions in v(region_expr).
- v('inner' '(' region_expr ')' ):=
- the set of regions in v(region_expr) that do not contain any other
region in v(region_expr). Note that for any region expression
A, the expression inner(A) is equivalent to (A not
containing A).
- v('outer' '(' region_expr ')' ):=
- the set of regions in v(region_expr) that are not contained in any
other region in v(region_expr). Note that for any region expression
A, the expression outer(A) is equivalent to (A not in
A).
- v('join' '(' n ',' region_expr ')' ):
- The value of this expression is formed by processing the regions of
v(region_expr) in increasing order of their start positions (and in
increasing order of end positions for regions with a common start). Each
region r produces a result region beginning at the start of r and
extending to the end of the (n-1)th region after r. The operation is
useful only with non-nesting regions. Especially, when applied to 'chars',
it can be used to express nearness conditions. For example,
'"/*" quote "*/" in join(10,chars)'
selects comments "/* ... */" which are at most 10
characters long.
Count the number of occurrences of string "sort" in file eval.c:
sgrep -c '"sort"' eval.c
Show all blocks delimited by braces in file eval.c:
sgrep '"{" .. "}"' eval.c
Show the outermost blocks that contain "sort" or
"nest":
sgrep 'outer("{" .. "}" containing ("sort" or "nest"))'\
eval.c
Show all lines containing "sort" but no "nest"
in files with an extension .c, preceded by the name of the file:
sgrep -o "%f:%r" '"\n" _. "\n" containing "sort" \
not containing "nest"' *.c
(Notice that this query would omit the first line, since it has no
preceding new-line character '\n', and also the last one, if not terminated
by a new-line. For a correct way to express text lines, see the definition
of the LINE macro below.)
Show the beginning of conditional statements, consisting of
"if" followed by a condition in parentheses, in files *.c. The
query has to disregard "if"s appearing within comments "/*
... */" or on compiler control lines beginning with '#':
sgrep '"if" not in ("/*" quote "*/" or ("\n#" .. "\n")) \
.. ("(" .. ")")' *.c
Show the if-statements containing string "access" in
their condition part appearing in the main function of the program in source
files *.c:
sgrep '"if" not in ("/*" quote "*/" or ("\n#" .. "\n")) \
.. ("(" .. ")") containing "access" \
in ("main(" .. ("{" .. "}")) \
.. ("{" .. "}" or ";")' *.c
We see that complicated conditions can become rather illegible.
The use of carefully designed macros can make expressing queries
much easier. For example, one could give the below m4 macro processor
definitions in a file, say, c.macros:
define(BLOCK,( "{" .. "}" ))
define(COMMENT,( "/*" quote "*/" ))
changecom(%)
define(CTRLINE,( "#" in start or "\n#"
_. ("\n" or end) ))
define(IF_COND,( "if" not in (COMMENT or CTRLINE)
.. ("(" .. ")")))
Then the above query could be written more intuitively as
sgrep -p m4 -f c.macros -e 'IF_COND containing "access"\
in ( "main(" .. BLOCK ) .. (BLOCK or ";")' *.c
sgrep performs common subexpression elimination on the query expression,
so that recurring sub-expressions are evaluated only once. For example, in
expression
'(" " or "\n" or "\t") .. (" " or "\n" or "\t")'
the sub-expression
'(" " or "\n" or "\t")'
is evaluated only one.
Exit status is 0 if any matching regions are found, 1 if none, 2 for syntax
errors or inaccessible files (even if matching regions were found).
One's own default options for sgrep can be given as a value of the environment
variable SGREPOPT. For example, executing
setenv SGREPOPT '-p m4 -o %r\n'
makes sgrep to apply m4 preprocessor to the expression and display
each output region as such followed by a line feed.
Sgrep tries to read the contents of the files $HOME/.sgreprc and
/usr/lib/sgreprc. Generally useful macro definitions may be placed in
these files. Using m4 (or some other) macro processor, for example the
following definitions could go in one of these files:
define(BLANK,( " " or "\t" or "\n"))
define(LEND,( "\n" or end ))
define(LINE,( start .. LEND or ("\n" _. LEND) ))
define(NUMERAL,( "1" or "2" or "3" or "4" or "5" or
"6" or "7" or "8" or "9" or "0" ))
- Regular expressions (The most important missing feature)
- Built-in macro preprocessor
- More operations
- Indexing for large static texts
Jani Jaakkola and Pekka Kilpelainen, University of Helsinki, Department of
Computer Science, 1995.
Sgrep may use lots of memory, when evaluating complex queries on big
files. When sgrep reads its input text from a pipe, it copies it to a
temporary file. sgrep does not have regular expressions in search patters.
awk(1), ed(1), grep(1)
sgrep home page at
http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/~jjaakkol/sgrep.html
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