This a port to VMS of GNU Grep. It is not working 100%, but it does work for most applications. The test suite does not pass at all, however. This port is of GNU GREP 1.3 using some patches from a port of GREP 1.1. This README documents GNU e?grep version 1.3. Changes needed to the makefile under various perversions of Unix are described therein. If the type "char" is unsigned on your machine, you will have to fix the definition of the macro SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR() in regex.c. A reasonable definition might be: #define SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR(c) ((c)>(char)127?(c)-256:(c)) GNU e?grep is provided "as is" with no warranty. The exact terms under which you may use and (re)distribute this program are detailed in a comment at the top of grep.c. GNU e?grep is based on a fast lazy-state deterministic matcher (about twice as fast as stock Unix egrep) hybridized with a Boyer-Moore-Gosper search for a fixed string that eliminates impossible text from being considered by the full regexp matcher without necessarily having to look at every character. The result is typically many times faster than Unix grep or egrep. (Regular expressions containing backreferencing may run more slowly, however.) GNU e?grep attempts, as closely as possible, to understand compatibly the regexp syntaxes of the Unix programs it replaces. The following table details the various special characters understood in both the grep and egrep incarnations: (grep) (egrep) (explanation) . . matches any single character except newline \? ? postfix operator; preceeding item is optional * * postfix operator; preceeding item 0 or more times \+ + postfix operator; preceeding item 1 or more times \| | infix operator; matches either argument ^ ^ matches the empty string at the beginning of a line $ $ matches the empty string at the end of a line \< \< matches the empty string at the beginning of a word \> \> matches the empty string at the end of a word [chars] [chars] match any character in the given class; if the first character after [ is ^, match any character not in the given class; a range of characters may be specified by -; for example, \W (below) is equivalent to the class [^A-Za-z0-9] \( \) ( ) parentheses are used to override operator precedence \<1-9> \<1-9> \ matches a repeat of the text matched earlier in the regexp by the subexpression inside the nth opening parenthesis \ \ any special character may be preceded by a backslash to match it literally (the following are for compatibility with GNU Emacs) \b \b matches the empty string at the edge of a word \B \B matches the empty string if not at the edge of a word \w \w matches word-constituent characters (letters & digits) \W \W matches characters that are not word-constituent Operator precedence is (highest to lowest) ?, *, and +, concatenation, and finally |. All other constructs are syntactically identical to normal characters. For the truly interested, a comment in dfa.c describes the exact grammar understood by the parser. GNU e?grep understands the following command line options: -A print lines of context after every matching line -B print lines of context before every matching line -C print 2 lines of context on each side of every match - print lines of context on each side -V print the version number on stderr -b print every match preceded by its byte offset -c print a total count of matching lines only -e search for ; useful if begins with - -f take from the given -h don't display filenames on matches -i ignore case difference when comparing strings -l list files containing matches only -n print each match preceded by its line number -s run silently producing no output except error messages -v print only lines that contain no matches for the -w print only lines where the match is a complete word -x print only lines where the match is a whole line The options understood by GNU e?grep are meant to be (nearly) compatible with both the BSD and System V versions of grep and egrep. The following incompatibilities with other versions of grep exist: the context-dependent meaning of * is not quite the same (grep only) -b prints a byte offset instead of a block offset the \{m,n\} construct of System V grep is not implemented GNU e?grep has been thoroughly debugged and tested by several people over a period of several months; we think it's a reliable beast or we wouldn't distribute it. If by some fluke of the universe you discover a bug, send a detailed description (including options, regular expressions, and a copy of an input file that can reproduce it) to me, mike@wheaties.ai.mit.edu. GNU e?grep is brought to you by the efforts of several people: Mike Haertel wrote the deterministic regexp code and the bulk of the program. James A. Woods is responsible for the hybridized search strategy of using Boyer-Moore-Gosper fixed-string search as a filter before calling the general regexp matcher. Arthur David Olson contributed code that finds fixed strings for the aforementioned BMG search for a large class of regexps. Richard Stallman wrote the backtracking regexp matcher that is used for \ backreferences, as well as the getopt that is provided for 4.2BSD sites. The backtracking matcher was originally written for GNU Emacs. D. A. Gwyn wrote the C alloca emulation that is provided so System V machines can run this program. (Alloca is used only by RMS' backtracking matcher, and then only rarely, so there is no loss if your machine doesn't have a "real" alloca.) Scott Anderson and Henry Spencer designed the regression tests used in the "regress" script. Paul Placeway wrote the manual page, based on this README. If you are interested in improving this program, you may wish to try any of the following: 1. Make backreferencing \ faster. Right now, backreferencing is handled by calling the Emacs backtracking matcher to verify the partial match. This is slow; if the DFA routines could handle backreferencing themselves a speedup on the order of three to four times might occur in those cases where the backtracking matcher is called to verify nearly every line. Also, some portability problems due to the inclusion of the emacs matcher would be solved because it could then be eliminated. Note that expressions with backreferencing are not true regular expressions, and thus are not equivalent to any DFA. So this is hard. 2. There is a bug in the backtracking matcher, regex.c, such that the | operator is not properly commutative. Let x and y be arbitrary regular expressions, and suppose both x and y have matches at some point in the target text. Then the regexp x|y should select the longest of the two matches. With the backtracking matcher, if the first match succeeds it does not even try the second, even though the second may be a longer match. This is obviously of no concern for grep, which does not care exactly where or how long a match is, so long as it knows it is there. On the other hand, the backtracking matcher is used in GNU AWK, wherein its behavior can only be considered a bug. 3. Handle POSIX style regexps. I'm not sure if this could be called an improvement; some of the things on regexps in the POSIX draft I have seen are pretty sickening. But it would be useful in the interests of conforming to the standard.