Cross platform regex substring match for git - regex

Sorry for yet another pattern matching question, but I'm struggling to to find a tool that will do a regex in a git hook. It needs to work on Windows, Mac and Linux.
This gnu grep works for Windows and Linux, but not Mac (because bsd)
echo "feature/EOPP-234-foo" | grep -Po -e '[A-Z]{4}-\d{1,5}'
This works for Mac and Linux, but not windows (because <git>\usr\bin\egrep don't seem to work)
echo "feature/EOPP-234-foo" | egrep -o '[A-Z]{4}-\d{1,5}'
sed might be the most common tool, but stuffed if I can get it to match:
echo "feature/EOPP-234-foo" | sed -n 's/^.*\([A-Z]{4}\-\d{1,5}\).*$/\1/p'
I've even tried bash matching with no luck
[[ "feature/EOPP-234-foo" =~ ([A-Z]{4}-\d{1,5}) ]] && echo ${BASH_REMATCH[1]}
Any ideas?

When you need to make POSIX tools run on Windows, you need to remember to use double quotation marks around your commands, not single quotes.
Also, you can use a common POSIX ERE compliant regex across all these environments. This means \d must be replaced with [0-9] or [[:digit:]] as \d is a PCRE only compliant construct.
You can use
grep -Eo "[A-Z]{4}-[0-9]{1,5}"
grep -Eo "[A-Z]{4}-[[:digit:]]{1,5}"

Related

Case insensitive sed for pattern [duplicate]

I'm trying to use SED to extract text from a log file. I can do a search-and-replace without too much trouble:
sed 's/foo/bar/' mylog.txt
However, I want to make the search case-insensitive. From what I've googled, it looks like appending i to the end of the command should work:
sed 's/foo/bar/i' mylog.txt
However, this gives me an error message:
sed: 1: "s/foo/bar/i": bad flag in substitute command: 'i'
What's going wrong here, and how do I fix it?
Update: Starting with macOS Big Sur (11.0), sed now does support the I flag for case-insensitive matching, so the command in the question should now work (BSD sed doesn't reporting its version, but you can go by the date at the bottom of the man page, which should be March 27, 2017 or more recent); a simple example:
# BSD sed on macOS Big Sur and above (and GNU sed, the default on Linux)
$ sed 's/ö/#/I' <<<'FÖO'
F#O # `I` matched the uppercase Ö correctly against its lowercase counterpart
Note: I (uppercase) is the documented form of the flag, but i works as well.
Similarly, starting with macOS Big Sur (11.0) awk now is locale-aware (awk --version should report 20200816 or more recent):
# BSD awk on macOS Big Sur and above (and GNU awk, the default on Linux)
$ awk 'tolower($0)' <<<'FÖO'
föo # non-ASCII character Ö was properly lowercased
The following applies to macOS up to Catalina (10.15):
To be clear: On macOS, sed - which is the BSD implementation - does NOT support case-insensitive matching - hard to believe, but true. The formerly accepted answer, which itself shows a GNU sed command, gained that status because of the perl-based solution mentioned in the comments.
To make that Perl solution work with foreign characters as well, via UTF-8, use something like:
perl -C -Mutf8 -pe 's/öœ/oo/i' <<< "FÖŒ" # -> "Foo"
-C turns on UTF-8 support for streams and files, assuming the current locale is UTF-8-based.
-Mutf8 tells Perl to interpret the source code as UTF-8 (in this case, the string passed to -pe) - this is the shorter equivalent of the more verbose -e 'use utf8;'.Thanks, Mark Reed
(Note that using awk is not an option either, as awk on macOS (i.e., BWK awk and BSD awk) appears to be completely unaware of locales altogether - its tolower() and toupper() functions ignore foreign characters (and sub() / gsub() don't have case-insensitivity flags to begin with).)
A note on the relationship of sed and awk to the POSIX standard:
BSD sed and awk limit their functionality mostly to what the POSIX sed and
POSIX awk specs mandate, whereas their GNU counterparts implement many more extensions.
Editor's note: This solution doesn't work on macOS (out of the box), because it only applies to GNU sed, whereas macOS comes with BSD sed.
Capitalize the 'I'.
sed 's/foo/bar/I' file
Another work-around for sed on Mac OS X is to install gsedfrom MacPorts or HomeBrew and then create the alias sed='gsed'.
If you are doing pattern matching first, e.g.,
/pattern/s/xx/yy/g
then you want to put the I after the pattern:
/pattern/Is/xx/yy/g
Example:
echo Fred | sed '/fred/Is//willma/g'
returns willma; without the I, it returns the string untouched (Fred).
The sed FAQ addresses the closely related case-insensitive search. It points out that a) many versions of sed support a flag for it and b) it's awkward to do in sed, you should rather use awk or Perl.
But to do it in POSIX sed, they suggest three options (adapted for substitution here):
Convert to uppercase and store original line in hold space; this won't work for substitutions, though, as the original content will be restored before printing, so it's only good for insert or adding lines based on a case-insensitive match.
Maybe the possibilities are limited to FOO, Foo and foo. These can be covered by
s/FOO/bar/;s/[Ff]oo/bar/
To search for all possible matches, one can use bracket expressions for each character:
s/[Ff][Oo][Oo]/bar/
The Mac version of sed seems a bit limited. One way to work around this is to use a linux container (via Docker) which has a useable version of sed:
cat your_file.txt | docker run -i busybox /bin/sed -r 's/[0-9]{4}/****/Ig'
Use following to replace all occurrences:
sed 's/foo/bar/gI' mylog.txt
I had a similar need, and came up with this:
this command to simply find all the files:
grep -i -l -r foo ./*
this one to exclude this_shell.sh (in case you put the command in a script called this_shell.sh), tee the output to the console to see what happened, and then use sed on each file name found to replace the text foo with bar:
grep -i -l -r --exclude "this_shell.sh" foo ./* | tee /dev/fd/2 | while read -r x; do sed -b -i 's/foo/bar/gi' "$x"; done
I chose this method, as I didn't like having all the timestamps changed for files not modified. feeding the grep result allows only the files with target text to be looked at (thus likely may improve performance / speed as well)
be sure to backup your files & test before using. May not work in some environments for files with embedded spaces. (?)
Following should be fine:
sed -i 's/foo/bar/gi' mylog.txt

grep command with a lookahead pattern does not select anything

I was trying to use the following grep command:
grep '(.*)(?=(png|html|jpg|js|css)(?:\s*))(png|html|jpg|js|css.*\s)' file
File contains the following:
http://manage.bostonglobe.com/GiftTheGlobe/LandingPage.html
https://manage.bostonglobe.com/cs/mc/login.aspx?p1=BGFooter
https://www.bostonglobe.com/bgcs
/newsletters?p1=BGFooter_Newsletters
https://bostonglobe.custhelp.com/app/home?p1=BGFooter
https://bostonglobe.custhelp.com/app/answers/list?p1=BGFooter
/tools/help/stafflist?p1=BGFooter
https://www.bostonglobemedia.com/
https://manage.bostonglobe.com/Order/newspaper/Newspaper.aspx
https://www.facebook.com/globe
https://twitter.com/#!/BostonGlobe
https://plus.google.com/108227564341535363126/about
https://epaper.bostonglobe.com/launch.aspx?pbid=2c60291d-c20c-4780-9829- b3d9a12687cf
http://nieonline.com/bostonglobe/
https://secure.pqarchiver.com/boston-sub/no_default.html?ss=1&url=%2Fboston-sub%2Fadvancedsearch.html
/tools/help/privacy?p1=BGFooter
/tools/help/terms-service?p1=BGFooter
/termsofpurchase?p1=BGFooter
https://www.bostonglobemedia.com/careers
/css/globe-print.css?v=19256I1935
//meter.bostonglobe.com/css/style.css
/css/globe-print.css?v=19256I1935
//cdn.blueconic.net/bostonglobemedia.js
/js/lib/rwd-images.js,lib/respond.min.js,lib/modernizr.custom.min.js,globe- define.js,globe-controller.js?v=19256I1935
data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw==
/js/lib/jquery.js,lib/lo-dash-custom-2.4.1.js,lib/a9.js,lib/pb.js,dist/ad- init.js,globe-newsletter.js,globe-profile-page.js,dist/globe-topic-nav.js,dist/rakuten.js?v=19256I1935
//dc8xl0ndzn2cb.cloudfront.net/js/bostonglobe/v0/keywee.min.js
For some reason it doesn't select anything from that file, Ive tried different flags but cant seem to figure out whats wrong
You are using a PCRE regex with the POSIX BRE engine that is default grep engine.
To make those patterns work, you should use -P option (available in GNU grep):
grep -P 'YOUR_PCRE_PATTERN'
^^
To develop and test PCRE patterns, a well-known regex101.com is usually recommended.
Note that on Mac OS, you may install GNU grep via brew.

Making a mistake with | (or) in regular expressions

I'm sure I'm doing something really obviously wrong here, but I can't figure out what. Using grep from a bash shell, I have a file test.txt:
ABC123
ABC456
ABC789
DEF123
DEF456
DEF789
Now at the command line:
$ grep ABC test2.txt
ABC123
ABC456
ABC789
$ grep DEF test2.txt
DEF123
DEF456
DEF789
So those work great. Now, I expect the following command to print the whole file, but:
$ grep ABC\|DEF test2.txt
$ grep (ABC)\|(DEF) test2.txt
-bash: syntax error near unexpected token `ABC'
$ grep \(ABC\)\|\(DEF\) test2.txt
$ grep 'ABC|DEF' test2.txt
What am I doing wrong?
Turn on the extended regex with -E:
grep -E "ABC|DEF" test2.txt
As others have pointed out, standard grep command does not support the or syntax. Unfortunately, from there, things are a mishmash.
Some systems have a egrep that does offer or syntax.
Some systems can use a -E or -P (for Perl) flag to extend grep syntax.
Some systems have both the -E and egrep that do the same thing. This implies that there are systems out there where grep -E and egrep are not the same. (sad but true).
Some systems now use the extended regular expressions in their standard grep command. Apparently, your system doesn't.
Read your manpages to see what your system does support. Some systems have a manpage for re_formatthat will explain what they support and don't support in extended format.
Then again, you could always just use a Perl one-liner:
$ perl -ne "print if /(ABC)|(DEF)/" test.txt
At least you know all the stuff that supports.
I don't think standard syntax supports it. You could use -P switch if available:
grep -P "(ABC|DEF)" test2.txt
Use egrep instead, which is the same as using grep -E:
egrep 'ABC|DEF' test2.txt

How do you find using regular expression, characters beginning with and ending with any characters

In
AXyz122311Xyslasd22344ssaa Aklsssx#sdddf#4=sadsss kaaAASds
How do we get the characters "slas" out that begins with "11Xy" and ends with "d223" in UNIX using regular expression?
This is what lookahead and lookbehind assertions will do.
Have you tried something like this?
(?<=11Xy).+(?=d223)
Update
You can use grep -o to display only the matched text in a *nix environment.
Not too late, but, downvoters need to include that *NIX grep has a few limitations and lookaround/lookbehind/etc., do not actually work on most versions.
http://www.regular-expressions.info/grep.html
Since neither grep nor egrep support any of the special features such as lazy repetition or lookaround,
Only, recently was it added to GNU grep (3.0 ?) released recently which basically uses perl compatible regex
https://www.gnu.org/software/grep/manual/grep.html#The-Backslash-Character-and-Special-Expressions
-P
--perl-regexp Interpret the pattern as a Perl-compatible regular expression (PCRE). This is highly experimental, particularly when combined with the -z (--null-data) option, and ‘grep -P’ may warn of unimplemented features.
On upgrading my grep and using -P, it works like a charm
$cat test.txt | ggrep -oP '(?<=11Xy)(.*?)(?=d223)'
slas
$ggrep --version
ggrep (GNU grep) 3.1
Packaged by Homebrew
Copyright (C) 2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
...
On some OS, especially mac, your grep is BSD, so you have install GNU grep using homebrew to use it.
$grep -V
grep (BSD grep) 2.5.1-FreeBSD
$brew install grep
...
$ggrep -V

grep with regexp: whitespace doesn't match unless I add an assertion

GNU grep 2.5.4 on bash 4.1.5(1) on Ubuntu 10.04
This matches
$ echo "this is a line" | grep 'a[[:space:]]\+line'
this is a line
But this doesn't
$ echo "this is a line" | grep 'a\s\+line'
But this matches too
$ echo "this is a line" | grep 'a\s\+\bline'
this is a line
I don't understand why #2 does not match (whereas # 1 does) and #3 also shows a match. Whats the difference here?
Take a look at your grep manpage. Perl added a lot of regular expression extensions that weren't in the original specification. However, because they proved so useful, many programs adopted them.
Unfortunately, grep is sometimes stuck in the past because you want to make sure your grep command remains compatible with older versions of grep.
Some systems have egrep with some extensions. Others allow you to use grep -E to get them. Still others have a grep -P that allows you to use Perl extensions. I believe Linux systems' grep command can use the -P extension which is not available in most Unix systems unless someone has replaced the grep with the GNU version. Newer versions of Mac OS X also support the -P switch, but not older versions.
grep doesn't support the complete set of regular expressions, so try using -P to enable perl regular expressions. You don't need to escape the + i.e.
echo "this is a line" | grep -P 'a\s+line'