57

I often want to write commands like this (in zsh, if it's relevant):

find <somebasedirectory> | \
    grep stringinfilenamesIwant | \
    grep -v stringinfilesnamesIdont | \
    xargs dosomecommand

(or more complex combinations of greps)

In recent years find has added the -print0 switch, and xargs has added -0, which allow handling of files with spaces in the name in an elegant way by null-terminating filenames instead, allowing for this:

find <somebasedirectory> -print0 | xargs -0 dosomecommand

However, grep (at least the version I have, GNU grep 2.10 on Ubuntu), doesn't seem to have an equivalent to consume and generate null-terminated lines; it has --null, but that only seems related to using -l to output names when searching in files directly with grep.

Is there an equivalent option or combination of options I can use with grep? Alternatively, is there an easy and elegant way to express my pipe of commands simply using find's -regex, or perhaps Perl?

1
  • 4
    The -print0 option is normally needed only to handle file names containing newlines not other white spaces because the conventional newline separator (used with -print) works fine for them. Dec 4, 2013 at 7:53

6 Answers 6

60

Use GNU Grep's --null Flag

According to the GNU Grep documentation, you can use Output Line Prefix Control to handle ASCII NUL characters the same way as find and xargs.

-Z
--null
Output a zero byte (the ASCII NUL character) instead of the character that normally follows a file name. For example, ‘grep -lZ’ outputs a zero byte after each file name instead of the usual newline. This option makes the output unambiguous, even in the presence of file names containing unusual characters like newlines. This option can be used with commands like ‘find -print0’, ‘perl -0’, ‘sort -z’, and ‘xargs -0’ to process arbitrary file names, even those that contain newline characters.

Use tr from GNU Coreutils

As the OP correctly points out, this flag is most useful when handling filenames on input or output. In order to actually convert grep output to use NUL characters as line endings, you'd need to use a tool like sed or tr to transform each line of output. For example:

find /etc/passwd -print0 |
    xargs -0 egrep -Z 'root|www' |
    tr "\n" "\0" |
    xargs -0 -n1

This pipeline will use NULs to separate filenames from find, and then convert newlines to NULs in the strings returned by egrep. This will pass NUL-terminated strings to the next command in the pipeline, which in this case is just xargs turning the output back into normal strings, but it could be anything you want.

7
  • 3
    Hmm, I'm not sure about this. I just wrote that this switch wasn't relevant (as I mentioned in my original question), since the manpage implies to me that it's only relevant when used in combination with switches that generate filenames (e.g. -l). However, some rudimentary testing isn't so clear. More investigation needed. Apologies for the premature downvote, which I can't undo. Apr 13, 2013 at 15:49
  • 4
    tr solution is great for all those commands that don't have a print0 like option.
    – Mordechai
    Aug 28, 2014 at 10:46
  • 5
    The whole point in using -0 and -z switches is that filenames may contain linefeeds in then. Using tr amounts to not using the switches at all.
    – gcscaglia
    May 21, 2016 at 15:30
  • 1
    technically, this fails in the case of a filename with a newline in it (which is legal for better or worse). I've never seen this happen, but it's the same reason people yell at you (or me) for parsing ls - edge cases.
    – Wyatt Ward
    Jul 5, 2016 at 0:58
  • 5
    I had to use --null-data instead of --null. I'm not 100% sure why, but it appears from grep --help that --null-data might change grep's behaviour to use null-termination, whereas --null will only output null-termination - not take it into account when processing input.
    – Tim Malone
    Apr 28, 2018 at 7:14
8

As you are already using GNU find you can use its internal regular expression pattern matching capabilities instead of these grep, eg:

find <somebasedirectory> -regex ".*stringinfilenamesIwant.*" ! -regex ".*stringinfilesnamesIdont.*" -exec dosomecommand {} + 
0
4

Use

find <somebasedirectory> -print0 | \
 grep -z stringinfilenamesIwant | \
 grep -zv stringinfilesnamesIdont | \
 xargs -0 dosomecommand

However, the pattern may not contain newline, see bug report.

3

The newest version of the GNU grep source can now use -z/--null to separate the output by null characters, while it previously only worked in conjunction with -l:

http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/grep.git/commit/?id=cce2fd5520bba35cf9b264de2f1b6131304f19d2

This means that your issue is solved automatically when using the newest version.

2

Instead of using a pipe, you can use find's -exec with the + terminator. To chain multiple commands together, you can spawn a shell in -exec.

find ./ -type f -exec bash -c 'grep "$@" | grep -v something | xargs dosomething' -- {} +
2
  • Will this spawn a new bash shell for each file found by find? I can't figure that out from the find manpage... Apr 12, 2013 at 16:41
  • @AndrewFerrier - no the + terminator causes it to function similar to xargs. One shell will be spawned and all files will be passed in. This also works in all POSIX versions of find, unlike print0.
    – jordanm
    Apr 12, 2013 at 16:45
-3
find <somebasedirectory> -print0 | xargs -0 -I % grep something '%'
2
  • 1
    Please provide a brief description of your answer to help OP and any future visitors understand why it works. Jul 17, 2013 at 20:24
  • 1
    I'm not clear how this addresses the question. This style doesn't invoke the dosomecommand in my original question. Jul 18, 2013 at 11:39

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