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I use the following command to find under /var some param in my script

grep -R "param" /var/* 2>/dev/null |grep -wq "param"

my problem is that: after grep find the param in file grep continue to search until all searches under /var/* will completed

How to perform stop immediately after grep match the param word

For example when I run the: grep -R "param" /var/* 2>/dev/null |grep -wq "param"

grep find the param after one second.

But grep continue to Search other same param on other files and its take almost 30 seconds

How to stop the grep immediately after param match?

THX

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  • Belongs on superuser.com
    – Paul R
    Jun 18, 2010 at 12:13

4 Answers 4

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you can use grep -m 1 to stop after the first match

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  • 1
    -m 1 will stop after the first match in each file searched.
    – Leom Burke
    Jun 17, 2010 at 10:27
  • because I try on some options and its not stop the grep search?
    – yael
    Jun 17, 2010 at 10:29
  • grep -R -m 1 "param" /var/* 2>/dev/null |grep -wq "param" will still return every file that matches but will move on to the next file when it finds the first match. This speeds things up a fair bit. lacopo's answer below will return the first match.
    – Leom Burke
    Jun 17, 2010 at 10:30
  • yes but my quastion was about to match on the first try and stop not to cont to other files how can I do that?
    – yael
    Jun 17, 2010 at 11:03
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grep has a -m, --max-count option:

$ grep -R "param" /var/* 2>/dev/null |grep -wq -m1 "param"

Questions: why the double grep? why try to expand with * if you are making grep recursive? consider also -s to silent annoying error messages (I'd recommend alto to use -n to print matching line, but for the -q it seems you want no output):

$ grep -qsRw -m1 "param" /var
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  • THX the grep -qsRw -m1 "param" /var is very good for my case But I have other quastion how to add time out to grep for example after 20 second I need to break from grep or command how to do that according my first quastion? Yael
    – yael
    Jun 17, 2010 at 11:25
  • Of course grep does not manage timeouts, this is an orthogonal issue. See for example: stackoverflow.com/questions/687948/…
    – tokland
    Jun 17, 2010 at 12:01
  • ( /path/to/slow command with options ) & sleep 5 ; kill $! this not good for me because I check the $? of the grep what can I to do, seems I have abig problem -:(
    – yael
    Jun 17, 2010 at 12:06
  • Yael, this command is part of the question, he does not like it so he asks for alternatives. There are plenty of good answers there. For example you can use "timeout" (coreutils package): : timeout 2 mycommand
    – tokland
    Jun 17, 2010 at 12:27
  • maybe other solution for example to see which proccess is grep and then to kill it?
    – yael
    Jun 17, 2010 at 12:43
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If you are using GNU grep, try this:

  -m, --max-count=NUM       stop after NUM matches
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This way:

grep -R "param" /var/* 2>/dev/null |grep -wq "param" | head -n 1

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  • hi sorry but this not stop the grep procedure after the first match of param Yael
    – yael
    Jun 17, 2010 at 11:08
  • That's because "grep" doesn't know that "head" has closed the pipe until it tries to write the second match.
    – tokland
    Jun 17, 2010 at 11:19
  • I'm tempted to delete the answer, but I think my mistake is in some way instructing
    – Iacopo
    Jun 17, 2010 at 11:40
  • Yeah, just leave it. Using pipes+head raises some questions, not all commands have a -m option like grep. See: unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/…
    – tokland
    Jun 17, 2010 at 11:58
  • ( /path/to/slow command with options ) & sleep 5 ; kill $! this not good for me because I check the $? of the grep what can I to do, seems I have abig problem -:(
    – yael
    Jun 17, 2010 at 12:06

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