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Corning Community College
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UNIX/Linux Fundamentals
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Case Study 0xA: Fun with grep
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~~TOC~~
======Objective======
To explore the grep family of pattern-matching utilities.
======Reading======
The **REGULAR EXPRESSIONS** section of the **grep**(**1**) manual page.
======Background======
The **grep**(**1**) utility has been used in prior assignments in the context of "searching for" a pattern in a file.
grep wasn't just arbitrarily made up out of the blue. It has its roots in the regex functionality of vi/ex. (**//regex//** or **//regexp//** is an abbreviation of sorts for regular expression). **grep** is actually an acronym:
**GREP** = **G**lobally [search for] **R**egular **E**xpression [and] **P**rint
GREP can be used by itself on the command line or in conjunction with other commands (especially with pipes). You always need to supply your regular expression or pattern to grep.
There are a few different 'grep's in existance. Aside from the original **grep**, there is also **egrep** and **fgrep**.
^ variant of grep ^ description |
| grep | original grep. Accepts basic regex in search patterns |
| egrep | grep that accepts extended regex metacharacters in search patterns |
| fgrep | grep that accepts no regex. Just takes literal strings. Also called //fast// grep |
So what is the difference? It all depends on what you want to do. For most cases, grep will be suitable.
However, sometimes we wish to add a little more capability to our RegEx patterns. The "e" in egrep stands for "Extended Regular Expressions", and it adds some operators to our list of available Regular Expressions, including:
^ metacharacter ^ description |
| ( ) | group patterns together |
| | | logical OR, can be used for condensing many patterns together |
| + | match 1 or more of the preceding |
| ? | match 0 or 1 preceding |
The big advantage of **egrep** is that we can combine together patterns with an OR, allowing once again for the creation of single patterns that can apply to a wide range of situations. For example:
egrep '(Mon|Tues|Wednes|Thurs|Fri|Sat|Sun)day' somefile.text
Would match any day of the week. By utilizing the parenthesis to group together and the | to OR together, we have a single pattern that can be used to locate items of this pattern.
======Exercise======
Copy the pelopwar.txt file from the grep/ subdirectory of the UNIX Public Directory into your home directory.
^ 1. ^|Using the **grep**(**1**) utility, show me how you get the following:|
| ^ a.|How would you find all occurrences of the substring "coast"|
|:::^ b.|How many matches?|
|:::^ c.|How would you find all unique occurrences of "coast" as a word (ie not as part of a word)|
|:::^ d.|How many matches?|
|:::^ e.|How would you find all occurrence of the word "Dorian" that are the last word on the line.|
|:::^ f.|How would you find all lines that begin with the word "Again"|
^ 2. ^|Using **egrep**(**1**), show me how you get the following:|
| ^ a.|All instances of "Athens" or "Athenians" that occur at the beginning of the line.|
|:::^ b.|How would you accomplish this with just one call to **egrep**(**1**) using extended regexp's?|
|:::^ c.|All instances of "Corinth" or "Corinthians" that occur at the end of the line.|
|:::^ d.|How would you accomplish this with just one call to **egrep**(**1**):|
^ 3. ^|Using **fgrep**(**1**), show me how you get the following:|
| ^ a.|Try the same regexp that you used in **#2a**|
|:::^ b.|Did you get any results?|
|:::^ c.|Explain the outcome.|
^ 4. ^|Create and show me the command-lines to:|
| ^ a.|Display the first 4 lines of the **last**(**1**) command's output that begin with any of your initials. Include your output too.|
|:::^ b.|Using **sort**(**1**), alphabetize the output of the **lastlog**(**8**) command and use **grep**(**1**) to search for all lines that begin with a lowercase '**e**' through '**g**', then print out the first 4 lines of the resulting output.|
**__NOTE__**: For **#4b**, the **head**(**1**) utility can be used to help format the output with respect to some of the given specifications.
======Conclusions======
All questions in this assignment require an action or response. Please organize your responses into an easily readable format and submit the final results to your instructor.
Your assignment is expected to be performed and submitted in a clear and organized fashion- messy or unorganized assignments may have points deducted. Be sure to adhere to the submission policy.
The successful results of the following actions will be considered for evaluation:
* your responses to questions submitted at the following form:
http://lab46.corning-cc.edu/haas/content/unix/submit.php?csa
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* the response from the form (received via e-mail) saved as **csa.txt** to your **~/src/unix/** directory
* addition/commit of **~/src/unix/csa.txt** into your repository (CS 0x0 sets you up to do this).
As always, the class mailing list and class IRC channel are available for assistance, but not answers.