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I created a test file with the following:

<cert>
</cert>

I'm now trying to find this with grep and the following command, but it take forever to run. How can I search quickly for files that contain adjacent lines like these?

tr -d '\n' | grep '<cert></cert>' test.test
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1 Answer 1

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So, from the comments, you're trying to get the filenames that contain an empty <cert>..</cert> element. You're using several tools wrong. As @iiSeymour pointed out, tr only reads from standard input-- so if you want to use it to select from lots of filenames, you'll need to use a loop. grep prints out matching lines, not filenames; though you could use grep -l to see the filenames instead.

But you're only joining lines because grep works one line at a time; so let's use a better tool. Here's how to search with awk:

awk '/<cert>/ { started=1; } 
   /<\/cert>/ { if (started) { print FILENAME; nextfile;} }
 !/<cert>/ { started = 0; }' file1 file2 *.txt

It checks each line and keeps track of whether the previous line matched <cert>. (!/pattern/ sets the flag back to zero on lines not matching /pattern/.) Call it with all your files (or with a wildcard like *.txt).

And a friendly suggestion: Next time, try each command separately (you've been stuck on this for hours and you still don't know what grep does?). And have a quick look at the manual for the tools you want to use. Unix tools are usually too complex for simple trial and error.

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  • Good approach +1. You could use BEGINFILE to improve the readability of the script 'BEGINFILE{flag=0}/<cert>/{flag=1}/<\/cert>/&&flag{print FILENAME; nextfile}' Nov 30, 2015 at 18:34
  • @iiSeymour, that won't do it: The flag must be reset to zero if the<cert> element is not closed on the very next line.
    – alexis
    Nov 30, 2015 at 19:22
  • Oh I didn't get that requirement from the OP, in that case 'BEGINFILE{flag=0}/<cert>/{flag=NR+1}/<\/cert>/&&flag==NR{print FILENAME; nextfile}' Nov 30, 2015 at 19:28
  • I believe the OP explained their goal in a since-deleted comment (looks like they were also able to delete my comment?). Yup, that looks right; in my opinion both solutions are about equally readable (three clauses either way), but using the record number is a nice alternative. But FNR seems more logical than NR to me somehow...
    – alexis
    Nov 30, 2015 at 19:44
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    Using FNR would mean you could drop the BEGINFILE block however I agree the extra conditional does make both approaches equally readable. Nov 30, 2015 at 21:06

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