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I want to find string pattern in file in unix. I use below command:

$grep 2005057488 filename

But file contains millions of lines and i have many such files. What is fastest way to get pattern other than grep.

3 Answers 3

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grep is generally as fast as it gets. It's designed to one thing and one thing only - and it does what it does very well. You can read why here.

However, to speed things up there are a couple of things you could try. Firstly, it looks like the pattern you're looking for is a fixed string. Fortunately, grep has a 'fixed-strings' option:

-F, --fixed-strings
       Interpret PATTERN as a list of fixed strings, separated by newlines, any of which is to be matched. (-F is specified by POSIX.)

Secondly, because grep is generally pretty slow on UTF-8, you could try disabling national language support (NLS) by setting the environment LANG=C. Therefore, you could try this concoction:

LANG=C grep -F "2005057488" file

Thirdly, it wasn't clear in your question, but if your only trying to find if something exists once in your file, you could also try adding a maximum number of times to find the pattern. Therefore, when -m 1, grep will quit immediately after the first occurrence is found. Your command could now look like this:

LANG=C grep -m 1 -F "2005057488" file

Finally, if you have a multicore CPU, you could give GNU parallel a go. It even comes with an explanation of how to use it with grep. To run 1.5 jobs per core and give 1000 arguments to grep:

find . -type f | parallel -k -j150% -n 1000 -m grep -H -n STRING {}

To grep a big file in parallel use --pipe:

< bigfile parallel --pipe grep STRING

Depending on your disks and CPUs it may be faster to read larger blocks:

< bigfile parallel --pipe --block 10M grep STRING
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  • Is there a way to know the status of grep. I am asking this becuase, when searching for file with order of 50GB, I often like to know the status of cursor its searching for Jan 17, 2014 at 20:27
  • @BalajiBoggaramRamanarayan: I'm not sure what you mean by 'status of cursor'. If you mean 'progress', then I would usually use pv (pipe viewer).
    – Steve
    Jan 18, 2014 at 3:21
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grep works faster than sed.

$grep 2005057488 filename
$sed -n '/2005057488/p' filename

Still Both works to get that particular string in a file

0
sed -n '/2005057488/p' filename

Not sure if this is faster than grep though.

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  • It's unlikely. grep is designed to do just one thing (see my answer)
    – Steve
    Nov 29, 2012 at 12:40
  • @steve, should I delete my answer then? New to SO. Please help.
    – Anon
    Nov 29, 2012 at 13:03

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