When using grep, it will highlight any text in a line with a match to your regular expression.
What if I want this behaviour, but have grep print out all lines as well? I came up empty after a quick look through the grep man page.
Use ack. Check out its --passthru
option here: ack. It has the added benefit of allowing full Perl regular expressions.
$ ack --passthru 'pattern1' file_name
$ command_here | ack --passthru 'pattern1'
You can also do it using grep like this:
$ grep --color -E '^|pattern1|pattern2' file_name
$ command_here | grep --color -E '^|pattern1|pattern2'
This will match all lines and highlight the patterns. The ^
matches every start of the line but won't get printed/highlighted since it's not a character.
(Note that most of the setups will use --color by default. You may not need that flag).
grep
s optimize the pattern for fastest match. Mac OS X Mountain Lion switched to a BSD-style grep for which this doesn't work. The optimized expression matches all lines, but nothing is highlighted.
grep --color -E '(^|pattern1|pattern2)' file name
. In some flavours of grep + other regexes do OR matching on patterns it needs to be inside brackets.
grep --color -E '888|999|$'
: It works! The difference must be in using a text- vs regex-directed regex engine.
You can make sure that all lines match but there is nothing to highlight on irrelevant matches
egrep --color 'apple|' test.txt
Notes:
egrep
may be spelled also grep -E
--color
is usually default in most distributionsgrep
s. All lines match but nothing is highlighted.
-i
(case insensitive matches) there. Also, --color
is the default in most of the setups, you may not need that. grep -E
works just like egrep
. It will also work for command outputs like ls | egrep 'pattern|'. The pipe can go after or before any pattern
|pattern'. You can use a set of patters adding more pipes pattarn1|pattern2|
.
Jun 30, 2014 at 20:21
grep
also worked in 2012 when I commented. See my answer below for more details.
EDIT:
This works with OS X Mountain Lion's grep:
grep --color -E 'pattern1|pattern2|$'
This is better than '^|pattern1|pattern2'
because the ^
part of the alternation matches at the beginning of the line whereas the $
matches at the end of the line. Some regular expression engines won't highlight pattern1
or pattern2
because ^
already matched and the engine is eager.
Something similar happens for 'pattern1|pattern2|'
because the regex engine notices the empty alternation at the end of the pattern string matches the beginning of the subject string.
[1]: http://www.regular-expressions.info/engine.html
FIRST EDIT:
I ended up using Perl:
perl -pe 's:pattern:\033[31;1m$&\033[30;0m:g'
This assumes you have an ANSI-compatible terminal.
ORIGINAL ANSWER:
If you're stuck with a strange grep
, this might work:
grep -E --color=always -A500 -B500 'pattern1|pattern2' | grep -v '^--'
Adjust the numbers to get all the lines you want.
The second grep
just removes extraneous --
lines inserted by the BSD-style grep
on Mac OS X Mountain Lion, even when the contexts of consecutive matches overlap.
I thought GNU grep omitted the --
lines when context overlaps, but it's been a while so maybe I remember wrong.
grep
s. In particular, the selected answer and your answer don't work on OSX Mountain Lion.
grep --color -E '$|master|main|$'
You can use my highlight script from https://github.com/kepkin/dev-shell-essentials
It's better than grep cause you can highlight each match with it's own color.
$ command_here | highlight green "input" | highlight red "output"
Since you want matches highlighted, this is probably for human consumption (as opposed to piping to another program for instance), so a nice solution would be to use:
less -p <your-pattern> <your-file>
And if you don't care about case sensitivity:
less -i -p <your-pattern> <your-file>
This also has the advantage of having pages, which is nice when having to go through a long output
You can do it using only grep by:
which gives you the following:
while read line ; do (echo $line | grep PATTERN) || echo $line ; done < inputfile
If you want to print "all" lines, there is a simple working solution:
grep "test" -A 9999999 -B 9999999
grep
does not print any lines more than once.)
Oct 26, 2016 at 20:56
If you are doing this because you want more context in your search, you can do this:
cat BIG_FILE.txt | less
Doing a search in less
should highlight your search terms.
Or pipe the output to your favorite editor. One example:
cat BIG_FILE.txt | vim -
Then search/highlight/replace.
If you are looking for a pattern in a directory recursively, you can either first save it to file.
ls -1R ./ | list-of-files.txt
And then grep that, or pipe it to the grep search
ls -1R | grep --color -rE '[A-Z]|'
This will look of listing all files, but colour the ones with uppercase letters. If you remove the last | you will only see the matches.
I use this to find images named badly with upper case for example, but normal grep does not show the path for each file just once per directory so this way I can see context.
Maybe this is an XY problem, and what you are really trying to do is to highlight occurrences of words as they appear in your shell. If so, you may be able to use your terminal emulator for this. For instance, in Konsole, start Find (ctrl+shift+F) and type your word. The word will then be highlighted whenever it occurs in new or existing output until you cancel the function.
grep
I know just outputs the matching lines. What is this highlighting you speak of?