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- .TH PCRE2GREP 1 "22 December 2023" "PCRE2 10.43"
- .SH NAME
- pcre2grep - a grep with Perl-compatible regular expressions.
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B pcre2grep [options] [long options] [pattern] [path1 path2 ...]
- .
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .rs
- .sp
- \fBpcre2grep\fP searches files for character patterns, in the same way as other
- grep commands do, but it uses the PCRE2 regular expression library to support
- patterns that are compatible with the regular expressions of Perl 5. See
- .\" HREF
- \fBpcre2syntax\fP(3)
- .\"
- for a quick-reference summary of pattern syntax, or
- .\" HREF
- \fBpcre2pattern\fP(3)
- .\"
- for a full description of the syntax and semantics of the regular expressions
- that PCRE2 supports.
- .P
- Patterns, whether supplied on the command line or in a separate file, are given
- without delimiters. For example:
- .sp
- pcre2grep Thursday /etc/motd
- .sp
- If you attempt to use delimiters (for example, by surrounding a pattern with
- slashes, as is common in Perl scripts), they are interpreted as part of the
- pattern. Quotes can of course be used to delimit patterns on the command line
- because they are interpreted by the shell, and indeed quotes are required if a
- pattern contains white space or shell metacharacters.
- .P
- The first argument that follows any option settings is treated as the single
- pattern to be matched when neither \fB-e\fP nor \fB-f\fP is present.
- Conversely, when one or both of these options are used to specify patterns, all
- arguments are treated as path names. At least one of \fB-e\fP, \fB-f\fP, or an
- argument pattern must be provided.
- .P
- If no files are specified, \fBpcre2grep\fP reads the standard input. The
- standard input can also be referenced by a name consisting of a single hyphen.
- For example:
- .sp
- pcre2grep some-pattern file1 - file3
- .sp
- By default, input files are searched line by line, so pattern assertions about
- the beginning and end of a subject string (^, $, \eA, \eZ, and \ez) match at
- the beginning and end of each line. When a line matches a pattern, it is copied
- to the standard output, and if there is more than one file, the file name is
- output at the start of each line, followed by a colon. However, there are
- options that can change how \fBpcre2grep\fP behaves. For example, the \fB-M\fP
- option makes it possible to search for strings that span line boundaries. What
- defines a line boundary is controlled by the \fB-N\fP (\fB--newline\fP) option.
- The \fB-h\fP and \fB-H\fP options control whether or not file names are shown,
- and the \fB-Z\fP option changes the file name terminator to a zero byte.
- .P
- The amount of memory used for buffering files that are being scanned is
- controlled by parameters that can be set by the \fB--buffer-size\fP and
- \fB--max-buffer-size\fP options. The first of these sets the size of buffer
- that is obtained at the start of processing. If an input file contains very
- long lines, a larger buffer may be needed; this is handled by automatically
- extending the buffer, up to the limit specified by \fB--max-buffer-size\fP. The
- default values for these parameters can be set when \fBpcre2grep\fP is
- built; if nothing is specified, the defaults are set to 20KiB and 1MiB
- respectively. An error occurs if a line is too long and the buffer can no
- longer be expanded.
- .P
- The block of memory that is actually used is three times the "buffer size", to
- allow for buffering "before" and "after" lines. If the buffer size is too
- small, fewer than requested "before" and "after" lines may be output.
- .P
- When matching with a multiline pattern, the size of the buffer must be at least
- half of the maximum match expected or the pattern might fail to match.
- .P
- Patterns can be no longer than 8KiB or BUFSIZ bytes, whichever is the greater.
- BUFSIZ is defined in \fB<stdio.h>\fP. When there is more than one pattern
- (specified by the use of \fB-e\fP and/or \fB-f\fP), each pattern is applied to
- each line in the order in which they are defined, except that all the \fB-e\fP
- patterns are tried before the \fB-f\fP patterns.
- .P
- By default, as soon as one pattern matches a line, no further patterns are
- considered. However, if \fB--colour\fP (or \fB--color\fP) is used to colour the
- matching substrings, or if \fB--only-matching\fP, \fB--file-offsets\fP,
- \fB--line-offsets\fP, or \fB--output\fP is used to output only the part of the
- line that matched (either shown literally, or as an offset), the behaviour is
- different. In this situation, all the patterns are applied to the line. If
- there is more than one match, the one that begins nearest to the start of the
- subject is processed; if there is more than one match at that position, the one
- with the longest matching substring is processed; if the matching substrings
- are equal, the first match found is processed.
- .P
- Scanning with all the patterns resumes immediately following the match, so that
- later matches on the same line can be found. Note, however, that an overlapping
- match that starts in the middle of another match will not be processed.
- .P
- The above behaviour was changed at release 10.41 to be more compatible with GNU
- grep. In earlier releases, \fBpcre2grep\fP did not recognize matches from
- later patterns that were earlier in the subject.
- .P
- Patterns that can match an empty string are accepted, but empty string
- matches are never recognized. An example is the pattern "(super)?(man)?", in
- which all components are optional. This pattern finds all occurrences of both
- "super" and "man"; the output differs from matching with "super|man" when only
- the matching substrings are being shown.
- .P
- If the \fBLC_ALL\fP or \fBLC_CTYPE\fP environment variable is set,
- \fBpcre2grep\fP uses the value to set a locale when calling the PCRE2 library.
- The \fB--locale\fP option can be used to override this.
- .
- .
- .SH "SUPPORT FOR COMPRESSED FILES"
- .rs
- .sp
- Compile-time options for \fBpcre2grep\fP can set it up to use \fBlibz\fP or
- \fBlibbz2\fP for reading compressed files whose names end in \fB.gz\fP or
- \fB.bz2\fP, respectively. You can find out whether your \fBpcre2grep\fP binary
- has support for one or both of these file types by running it with the
- \fB--help\fP option. If the appropriate support is not present, all files are
- treated as plain text. The standard input is always so treated. If a file with
- a \fB.gz\fP or \fB.bz2\fP extension is not in fact compressed, it is read as a
- plain text file. When input is from a compressed .gz or .bz2 file, the
- \fB--line-buffered\fP option is ignored.
- .
- .
- .SH "BINARY FILES"
- .rs
- .sp
- By default, a file that contains a binary zero byte within the first 1024 bytes
- is identified as a binary file, and is processed specially. However, if the
- newline type is specified as NUL, that is, the line terminator is a binary
- zero, the test for a binary file is not applied. See the \fB--binary-files\fP
- option for a means of changing the way binary files are handled.
- .
- .
- .SH "BINARY ZEROS IN PATTERNS"
- .rs
- .sp
- Patterns passed from the command line are strings that are terminated by a
- binary zero, so cannot contain internal zeros. However, patterns that are read
- from a file via the \fB-f\fP option may contain binary zeros.
- .
- .
- .SH OPTIONS
- .rs
- .sp
- The order in which some of the options appear can affect the output. For
- example, both the \fB-H\fP and \fB-l\fP options affect the printing of file
- names. Whichever comes later in the command line will be the one that takes
- effect. Similarly, except where noted below, if an option is given twice, the
- later setting is used. Numerical values for options may be followed by K or M,
- to signify multiplication by 1024 or 1024*1024 respectively.
- .TP 10
- \fB--\fP
- This terminates the list of options. It is useful if the next item on the
- command line starts with a hyphen but is not an option. This allows for the
- processing of patterns and file names that start with hyphens.
- .TP
- \fB-A\fP \fInumber\fP, \fB--after-context=\fP\fInumber\fP
- Output up to \fInumber\fP lines of context after each matching line. Fewer
- lines are output if the next match or the end of the file is reached, or if the
- processing buffer size has been set too small. If file names and/or line
- numbers are being output, a hyphen separator is used instead of a colon for the
- context lines (the \fB-Z\fP option can be used to change the file name
- terminator to a zero byte). A line containing "--" is output between each group
- of lines, unless they are in fact contiguous in the input file. The value of
- \fInumber\fP is expected to be relatively small. When \fB-c\fP is used,
- \fB-A\fP is ignored.
- .TP
- \fB-a\fP, \fB--text\fP
- Treat binary files as text. This is equivalent to
- \fB--binary-files\fP=\fItext\fP.
- .TP
- \fB--allow-lookaround-bsk\fP
- PCRE2 now forbids the use of \eK in lookarounds by default, in line with Perl.
- This option causes \fBpcre2grep\fP to set the PCRE2_EXTRA_ALLOW_LOOKAROUND_BSK
- option, which enables this somewhat dangerous usage.
- .TP
- \fB-B\fP \fInumber\fP, \fB--before-context=\fP\fInumber\fP
- Output up to \fInumber\fP lines of context before each matching line. Fewer
- lines are output if the previous match or the start of the file is within
- \fInumber\fP lines, or if the processing buffer size has been set too small. If
- file names and/or line numbers are being output, a hyphen separator is used
- instead of a colon for the context lines (the \fB-Z\fP option can be used to
- change the file name terminator to a zero byte). A line containing "--" is
- output between each group of lines, unless they are in fact contiguous in the
- input file. The value of \fInumber\fP is expected to be relatively small. When
- \fB-c\fP is used, \fB-B\fP is ignored.
- .TP
- \fB--binary-files=\fP\fIword\fP
- Specify how binary files are to be processed. If the word is "binary" (the
- default), pattern matching is performed on binary files, but the only output is
- "Binary file <name> matches" when a match succeeds. If the word is "text",
- which is equivalent to the \fB-a\fP or \fB--text\fP option, binary files are
- processed in the same way as any other file. In this case, when a match
- succeeds, the output may be binary garbage, which can have nasty effects if
- sent to a terminal. If the word is "without-match", which is equivalent to the
- \fB-I\fP option, binary files are not processed at all; they are assumed not to
- be of interest and are skipped without causing any output or affecting the
- return code.
- .TP
- \fB--buffer-size=\fP\fInumber\fP
- Set the parameter that controls how much memory is obtained at the start of
- processing for buffering files that are being scanned. See also
- \fB--max-buffer-size\fP below.
- .TP
- \fB-C\fP \fInumber\fP, \fB--context=\fP\fInumber\fP
- Output \fInumber\fP lines of context both before and after each matching line.
- This is equivalent to setting both \fB-A\fP and \fB-B\fP to the same value.
- .TP
- \fB-c\fP, \fB--count\fP
- Do not output lines from the files that are being scanned; instead output the
- number of lines that would have been shown, either because they matched, or, if
- \fB-v\fP is set, because they failed to match. By default, this count is
- exactly the same as the number of lines that would have been output, but if the
- \fB-M\fP (multiline) option is used (without \fB-v\fP), there may be more
- suppressed lines than the count (that is, the number of matches).
- .sp
- If no lines are selected, the number zero is output. If several files are
- being scanned, a count is output for each of them and the \fB-t\fP option can
- be used to cause a total to be output at the end. However, if the
- \fB--files-with-matches\fP option is also used, only those files whose counts
- are greater than zero are listed. When \fB-c\fP is used, the \fB-A\fP,
- \fB-B\fP, and \fB-C\fP options are ignored.
- .TP
- \fB--colour\fP, \fB--color\fP
- If this option is given without any data, it is equivalent to "--colour=auto".
- If data is required, it must be given in the same shell item, separated by an
- equals sign.
- .TP
- \fB--colour=\fP\fIvalue\fP, \fB--color=\fP\fIvalue\fP
- This option specifies under what circumstances the parts of a line that matched
- a pattern should be coloured in the output. It is ignored if
- \fB--file-offsets\fP, \fB--line-offsets\fP, or \fB--output\fP is set. By
- default, output is not coloured. The value for the \fB--colour\fP option (which
- is optional, see above) may be "never", "always", or "auto". In the latter
- case, colouring happens only if the standard output is connected to a terminal.
- More resources are used when colouring is enabled, because \fBpcre2grep\fP has
- to search for all possible matches in a line, not just one, in order to colour
- them all.
- .sp
- The colour that is used can be specified by setting one of the environment
- variables PCRE2GREP_COLOUR, PCRE2GREP_COLOR, PCREGREP_COLOUR, or
- PCREGREP_COLOR, which are checked in that order. If none of these are set,
- \fBpcre2grep\fP looks for GREP_COLORS or GREP_COLOR (in that order). The value
- of the variable should be a string of two numbers, separated by a semicolon,
- except in the case of GREP_COLORS, which must start with "ms=" or "mt="
- followed by two semicolon-separated colours, terminated by the end of the
- string or by a colon. If GREP_COLORS does not start with "ms=" or "mt=" it is
- ignored, and GREP_COLOR is checked.
- .sp
- If the string obtained from one of the above variables contains any characters
- other than semicolon or digits, the setting is ignored and the default colour
- is used. The string is copied directly into the control string for setting
- colour on a terminal, so it is your responsibility to ensure that the values
- make sense. If no relevant environment variable is set, the default is "1;31",
- which gives red.
- .TP
- \fB-D\fP \fIaction\fP, \fB--devices=\fP\fIaction\fP
- If an input path is not a regular file or a directory, "action" specifies how
- it is to be processed. Valid values are "read" (the default) or "skip"
- (silently skip the path).
- .TP
- \fB-d\fP \fIaction\fP, \fB--directories=\fP\fIaction\fP
- If an input path is a directory, "action" specifies how it is to be processed.
- Valid values are "read" (the default in non-Windows environments, for
- compatibility with GNU grep), "recurse" (equivalent to the \fB-r\fP option), or
- "skip" (silently skip the path, the default in Windows environments). In the
- "read" case, directories are read as if they were ordinary files. In some
- operating systems the effect of reading a directory like this is an immediate
- end-of-file; in others it may provoke an error.
- .TP
- \fB--depth-limit\fP=\fInumber\fP
- See \fB--match-limit\fP below.
- .TP
- \fB-E\fP, \fB--case-restrict\fP
- When case distinctions are being ignored in Unicode mode, two ASCII letters (K
- and S) will by default match Unicode characters U+212A (Kelvin sign) and U+017F
- (long S) respectively, as well as their lower case ASCII counterparts. When
- this option is set, case equivalences are restricted such that no ASCII
- character matches a non-ASCII character, and vice versa.
- .TP
- \fB-e\fP \fIpattern\fP, \fB--regex=\fP\fIpattern\fP, \fB--regexp=\fP\fIpattern\fP
- Specify a pattern to be matched. This option can be used multiple times in
- order to specify several patterns. It can also be used as a way of specifying a
- single pattern that starts with a hyphen. When \fB-e\fP is used, no argument
- pattern is taken from the command line; all arguments are treated as file
- names. There is no limit to the number of patterns. They are applied to each
- line in the order in which they are defined.
- .sp
- If \fB-f\fP is used with \fB-e\fP, the command line patterns are matched first,
- followed by the patterns from the file(s), independent of the order in which
- these options are specified.
- .TP
- \fB--exclude\fP=\fIpattern\fP
- Files (but not directories) whose names match the pattern are skipped without
- being processed. This applies to all files, whether listed on the command line,
- obtained from \fB--file-list\fP, or by scanning a directory. The pattern is a
- PCRE2 regular expression, and is matched against the final component of the
- file name, not the entire path. The \fB-F\fP, \fB-w\fP, and \fB-x\fP options do
- not apply to this pattern. The option may be given any number of times in order
- to specify multiple patterns. If a file name matches both an \fB--include\fP
- and an \fB--exclude\fP pattern, it is excluded. There is no short form for this
- option.
- .TP
- \fB--exclude-from=\fP\fIfilename\fP
- Treat each non-empty line of the file as the data for an \fB--exclude\fP
- option. What constitutes a newline when reading the file is the operating
- system's default. The \fB--newline\fP option has no effect on this option. This
- option may be given more than once in order to specify a number of files to
- read.
- .TP
- \fB--exclude-dir\fP=\fIpattern\fP
- Directories whose names match the pattern are skipped without being processed,
- whatever the setting of the \fB--recursive\fP option. This applies to all
- directories, whether listed on the command line, obtained from
- \fB--file-list\fP, or by scanning a parent directory. The pattern is a PCRE2
- regular expression, and is matched against the final component of the directory
- name, not the entire path. The \fB-F\fP, \fB-w\fP, and \fB-x\fP options do not
- apply to this pattern. The option may be given any number of times in order to
- specify more than one pattern. If a directory matches both \fB--include-dir\fP
- and \fB--exclude-dir\fP, it is excluded. There is no short form for this
- option.
- .TP
- \fB-F\fP, \fB--fixed-strings\fP
- Interpret each data-matching pattern as a list of fixed strings, separated by
- newlines, instead of as a regular expression. What constitutes a newline for
- this purpose is controlled by the \fB--newline\fP option. The \fB-w\fP (match
- as a word) and \fB-x\fP (match whole line) options can be used with \fB-F\fP.
- They apply to each of the fixed strings. A line is selected if any of the fixed
- strings are found in it (subject to \fB-w\fP or \fB-x\fP, if present). This
- option applies only to the patterns that are matched against the contents of
- files; it does not apply to patterns specified by any of the \fB--include\fP or
- \fB--exclude\fP options.
- .TP
- \fB-f\fP \fIfilename\fP, \fB--file=\fP\fIfilename\fP
- Read patterns from the file, one per line. As is the case with patterns on the
- command line, no delimiters should be used. What constitutes a newline when
- reading the file is the operating system's default interpretation of \en. The
- \fB--newline\fP option has no effect on this option. Trailing white space is
- removed from each line, and blank lines are ignored. An empty file contains no
- patterns and therefore matches nothing. Patterns read from a file in this way
- may contain binary zeros, which are treated as ordinary data characters.
- .sp
- If this option is given more than once, all the specified files are read. A
- data line is output if any of the patterns match it. A file name can be given
- as "-" to refer to the standard input. When \fB-f\fP is used, patterns
- specified on the command line using \fB-e\fP may also be present; they are
- matched before the file's patterns. However, no pattern is taken from the
- command line; all arguments are treated as the names of paths to be searched.
- .TP
- \fB--file-list\fP=\fIfilename\fP
- Read a list of files and/or directories that are to be scanned from the given
- file, one per line. What constitutes a newline when reading the file is the
- operating system's default. Trailing white space is removed from each line, and
- blank lines are ignored. These paths are processed before any that are listed
- on the command line. The file name can be given as "-" to refer to the standard
- input. If \fB--file\fP and \fB--file-list\fP are both specified as "-",
- patterns are read first. This is useful only when the standard input is a
- terminal, from which further lines (the list of files) can be read after an
- end-of-file indication. If this option is given more than once, all the
- specified files are read.
- .TP
- \fB--file-offsets\fP
- Instead of showing lines or parts of lines that match, show each match as an
- offset from the start of the file and a length, separated by a comma. In this
- mode, \fB--colour\fP has no effect, and no context is shown. That is, the
- \fB-A\fP, \fB-B\fP, and \fB-C\fP options are ignored. If there is more than one
- match in a line, each of them is shown separately. This option is mutually
- exclusive with \fB--output\fP, \fB--line-offsets\fP, and \fB--only-matching\fP.
- .TP
- \fB--group-separator\fP=\fItext\fP
- Output this text string instead of two hyphens between groups of lines when
- \fB-A\fP, \fB-B\fP, or \fB-C\fP is in use. See also \fB--no-group-separator\fP.
- .TP
- \fB-H\fP, \fB--with-filename\fP
- Force the inclusion of the file name at the start of output lines when
- searching a single file. The file name is not normally shown in this case.
- By default, for matching lines, the file name is followed by a colon; for
- context lines, a hyphen separator is used. The \fB-Z\fP option can be used to
- change the terminator to a zero byte. If a line number is also being output,
- it follows the file name. When the \fB-M\fP option causes a pattern to match
- more than one line, only the first is preceded by the file name. This option
- overrides any previous \fB-h\fP, \fB-l\fP, or \fB-L\fP options.
- .TP
- \fB-h\fP, \fB--no-filename\fP
- Suppress the output file names when searching multiple files. File names are
- normally shown when multiple files are searched. By default, for matching
- lines, the file name is followed by a colon; for context lines, a hyphen
- separator is used. The \fB-Z\fP option can be used to change the terminator to
- a zero byte. If a line number is also being output, it follows the file name.
- This option overrides any previous \fB-H\fP, \fB-L\fP, or \fB-l\fP options.
- .TP
- \fB--heap-limit\fP=\fInumber\fP
- See \fB--match-limit\fP below.
- .TP
- \fB--help\fP
- Output a help message, giving brief details of the command options and file
- type support, and then exit. Anything else on the command line is
- ignored.
- .TP
- \fB-I\fP
- Ignore binary files. This is equivalent to
- \fB--binary-files\fP=\fIwithout-match\fP.
- .TP
- \fB-i\fP, \fB--ignore-case\fP
- Ignore upper/lower case distinctions when pattern matching. This applies when
- matching path names for inclusion or exclusion as well as when matching lines
- in files.
- .TP
- \fB--include\fP=\fIpattern\fP
- If any \fB--include\fP patterns are specified, the only files that are
- processed are those whose names match one of the patterns and do not match an
- \fB--exclude\fP pattern. This option does not affect directories, but it
- applies to all files, whether listed on the command line, obtained from
- \fB--file-list\fP, or by scanning a directory. The pattern is a PCRE2 regular
- expression, and is matched against the final component of the file name, not
- the entire path. The \fB-F\fP, \fB-w\fP, and \fB-x\fP options do not apply to
- this pattern. The option may be given any number of times. If a file name
- matches both an \fB--include\fP and an \fB--exclude\fP pattern, it is excluded.
- There is no short form for this option.
- .TP
- \fB--include-from=\fP\fIfilename\fP
- Treat each non-empty line of the file as the data for an \fB--include\fP
- option. What constitutes a newline for this purpose is the operating system's
- default. The \fB--newline\fP option has no effect on this option. This option
- may be given any number of times; all the files are read.
- .TP
- \fB--include-dir\fP=\fIpattern\fP
- If any \fB--include-dir\fP patterns are specified, the only directories that
- are processed are those whose names match one of the patterns and do not match
- an \fB--exclude-dir\fP pattern. This applies to all directories, whether listed
- on the command line, obtained from \fB--file-list\fP, or by scanning a parent
- directory. The pattern is a PCRE2 regular expression, and is matched against
- the final component of the directory name, not the entire path. The \fB-F\fP,
- \fB-w\fP, and \fB-x\fP options do not apply to this pattern. The option may be
- given any number of times. If a directory matches both \fB--include-dir\fP and
- \fB--exclude-dir\fP, it is excluded. There is no short form for this option.
- .TP
- \fB-L\fP, \fB--files-without-match\fP
- Instead of outputting lines from the files, just output the names of the files
- that do not contain any lines that would have been output. Each file name is
- output once, on a separate line by default, but if the \fB-Z\fP option is set,
- they are separated by zero bytes instead of newlines. This option overrides any
- previous \fB-H\fP, \fB-h\fP, or \fB-l\fP options.
- .TP
- \fB-l\fP, \fB--files-with-matches\fP
- Instead of outputting lines from the files, just output the names of the files
- containing lines that would have been output. Each file name is output once, on
- a separate line, but if the \fB-Z\fP option is set, they are separated by zero
- bytes instead of newlines. Searching normally stops as soon as a matching line
- is found in a file. However, if the \fB-c\fP (count) option is also used,
- matching continues in order to obtain the correct count, and those files that
- have at least one match are listed along with their counts. Using this option
- with \fB-c\fP is a way of suppressing the listing of files with no matches that
- occurs with \fB-c\fP on its own. This option overrides any previous \fB-H\fP,
- \fB-h\fP, or \fB-L\fP options.
- .TP
- \fB--label\fP=\fIname\fP
- This option supplies a name to be used for the standard input when file names
- are being output. If not supplied, "(standard input)" is used. There is no
- short form for this option.
- .TP
- \fB--line-buffered\fP
- When this option is given, non-compressed input is read and processed line by
- line, and the output is flushed after each write. By default, input is read in
- large chunks, unless \fBpcre2grep\fP can determine that it is reading from a
- terminal, which is currently possible only in Unix-like environments or
- Windows. Output to terminal is normally automatically flushed by the operating
- system. This option can be useful when the input or output is attached to a
- pipe and you do not want \fBpcre2grep\fP to buffer up large amounts of data.
- However, its use will affect performance, and the \fB-M\fP (multiline) option
- ceases to work. When input is from a compressed .gz or .bz2 file,
- \fB--line-buffered\fP is ignored.
- .TP
- \fB--line-offsets\fP
- Instead of showing lines or parts of lines that match, show each match as a
- line number, the offset from the start of the line, and a length. The line
- number is terminated by a colon (as usual; see the \fB-n\fP option), and the
- offset and length are separated by a comma. In this mode, \fB--colour\fP has no
- effect, and no context is shown. That is, the \fB-A\fP, \fB-B\fP, and \fB-C\fP
- options are ignored. If there is more than one match in a line, each of them is
- shown separately. This option is mutually exclusive with \fB--output\fP,
- \fB--file-offsets\fP, and \fB--only-matching\fP.
- .TP
- \fB--locale\fP=\fIlocale-name\fP
- This option specifies a locale to be used for pattern matching. It overrides
- the value in the \fBLC_ALL\fP or \fBLC_CTYPE\fP environment variables. If no
- locale is specified, the PCRE2 library's default (usually the "C" locale) is
- used. There is no short form for this option.
- .TP
- \fB-M\fP, \fB--multiline\fP
- Allow patterns to match more than one line. When this option is set, the PCRE2
- library is called in "multiline" mode, and a match is allowed to continue past
- the end of the initial line and onto one or more subsequent lines.
- .sp
- Patterns used with \fB-M\fP may usefully contain literal newline characters and
- internal occurrences of ^ and $ characters, because in multiline mode these can
- match at internal newlines. Because \fBpcre2grep\fP is scanning multiple lines,
- the \eZ and \ez assertions match only at the end of the last line in the file.
- The \eA assertion matches at the start of the first line of a match. This can
- be any line in the file; it is not anchored to the first line.
- .sp
- The output for a successful match may consist of more than one line. The first
- line is the line in which the match started, and the last line is the line in
- which the match ended. If the matched string ends with a newline sequence, the
- output ends at the end of that line. If \fB-v\fP is set, none of the lines in a
- multi-line match are output. Once a match has been handled, scanning restarts
- at the beginning of the line after the one in which the match ended.
- .sp
- The newline sequence that separates multiple lines must be matched as part of
- the pattern. For example, to find the phrase "regular expression" in a file
- where "regular" might be at the end of a line and "expression" at the start of
- the next line, you could use this command:
- .sp
- pcre2grep -M 'regular\es+expression' <file>
- .sp
- The \es escape sequence matches any white space character, including newlines,
- and is followed by + so as to match trailing white space on the first line as
- well as possibly handling a two-character newline sequence.
- .sp
- There is a limit to the number of lines that can be matched, imposed by the way
- that \fBpcre2grep\fP buffers the input file as it scans it. With a sufficiently
- large processing buffer, this should not be a problem.
- .sp
- The \fB-M\fP option does not work when input is read line by line (see
- \fB--line-buffered\fP.)
- .TP
- \fB-m\fP \fInumber\fP, \fB--max-count\fP=\fInumber\fP
- Stop processing after finding \fInumber\fP matching lines, or non-matching
- lines if \fB-v\fP is also set. Any trailing context lines are output after the
- final match. In multiline mode, each multiline match counts as just one line
- for this purpose. If this limit is reached when reading the standard input from
- a regular file, the file is left positioned just after the last matching line.
- If \fB-c\fP is also set, the count that is output is never greater than
- \fInumber\fP. This option has no effect if used with \fB-L\fP, \fB-l\fP, or
- \fB-q\fP, or when just checking for a match in a binary file.
- .TP
- \fB--match-limit\fP=\fInumber\fP
- Processing some regular expression patterns may take a very long time to search
- for all possible matching strings. Others may require a very large amount of
- memory. There are three options that set resource limits for matching.
- .sp
- The \fB--match-limit\fP option provides a means of limiting computing resource
- usage when processing patterns that are not going to match, but which have a
- very large number of possibilities in their search trees. The classic example
- is a pattern that uses nested unlimited repeats. Internally, PCRE2 has a
- counter that is incremented each time around its main processing loop. If the
- value set by \fB--match-limit\fP is reached, an error occurs.
- .sp
- The \fB--heap-limit\fP option specifies, as a number of kibibytes (units of
- 1024 bytes), the maximum amount of heap memory that may be used for matching.
- .sp
- The \fB--depth-limit\fP option limits the depth of nested backtracking points,
- which indirectly limits the amount of memory that is used. The amount of memory
- needed for each backtracking point depends on the number of capturing
- parentheses in the pattern, so the amount of memory that is used before this
- limit acts varies from pattern to pattern. This limit is of use only if it is
- set smaller than \fB--match-limit\fP.
- .sp
- There are no short forms for these options. The default limits can be set
- when the PCRE2 library is compiled; if they are not specified, the defaults
- are very large and so effectively unlimited.
- .TP
- \fB--max-buffer-size\fP=\fInumber\fP
- This limits the expansion of the processing buffer, whose initial size can be
- set by \fB--buffer-size\fP. The maximum buffer size is silently forced to be no
- smaller than the starting buffer size.
- .TP
- \fB-N\fP \fInewline-type\fP, \fB--newline\fP=\fInewline-type\fP
- Six different conventions for indicating the ends of lines in scanned files are
- supported. For example:
- .sp
- pcre2grep -N CRLF 'some pattern' <file>
- .sp
- The newline type may be specified in upper, lower, or mixed case. If the
- newline type is NUL, lines are separated by binary zero characters. The other
- types are the single-character sequences CR (carriage return) and LF
- (linefeed), the two-character sequence CRLF, an "anycrlf" type, which
- recognizes any of the preceding three types, and an "any" type, for which any
- Unicode line ending sequence is assumed to end a line. The Unicode sequences
- are the three just mentioned, plus VT (vertical tab, U+000B), FF (form feed,
- U+000C), NEL (next line, U+0085), LS (line separator, U+2028), and PS
- (paragraph separator, U+2029).
- .sp
- When the PCRE2 library is built, a default line-ending sequence is specified.
- This is normally the standard sequence for the operating system. Unless
- otherwise specified by this option, \fBpcre2grep\fP uses the library's default.
- .sp
- This option makes it possible to use \fBpcre2grep\fP to scan files that have
- come from other environments without having to modify their line endings. If
- the data that is being scanned does not agree with the convention set by this
- option, \fBpcre2grep\fP may behave in strange ways. Note that this option does
- not apply to files specified by the \fB-f\fP, \fB--exclude-from\fP, or
- \fB--include-from\fP options, which are expected to use the operating system's
- standard newline sequence.
- .TP
- \fB-n\fP, \fB--line-number\fP
- Precede each output line by its line number in the file, followed by a colon
- for matching lines or a hyphen for context lines. If the file name is also
- being output, it precedes the line number. When the \fB-M\fP option causes a
- pattern to match more than one line, only the first is preceded by its line
- number. This option is forced if \fB--line-offsets\fP is used.
- .TP
- \fB--no-group-separator\fP
- Do not output a separator between groups of lines when \fB-A\fP, \fB-B\fP, or
- \fB-C\fP is in use. The default is to output a line containing two hyphens. See
- also \fB--group-separator\fP.
- .TP
- \fB--no-jit\fP
- If the PCRE2 library is built with support for just-in-time compiling (which
- speeds up matching), \fBpcre2grep\fP automatically makes use of this, unless it
- was explicitly disabled at build time. This option can be used to disable the
- use of JIT at run time. It is provided for testing and working around problems.
- It should never be needed in normal use.
- .TP
- \fB-O\fP \fItext\fP, \fB--output\fP=\fItext\fP
- When there is a match, instead of outputting the line that matched, output just
- the text specified in this option, followed by an operating-system standard
- newline. In this mode, \fB--colour\fP has no effect, and no context is shown.
- That is, the \fB-A\fP, \fB-B\fP, and \fB-C\fP options are ignored. The
- \fB--newline\fP option has no effect on this option, which is mutually
- exclusive with \fB--only-matching\fP, \fB--file-offsets\fP, and
- \fB--line-offsets\fP. However, like \fB--only-matching\fP, if there is more
- than one match in a line, each of them causes a line of output.
- .sp
- Escape sequences starting with a dollar character may be used to insert the
- contents of the matched part of the line and/or captured substrings into the
- text.
- .sp
- $<digits> or ${<digits>} is replaced by the captured substring of the given
- decimal number; zero substitutes the whole match. If the number is greater than
- the number of capturing substrings, or if the capture is unset, the replacement
- is empty.
- .sp
- $a is replaced by bell; $b by backspace; $e by escape; $f by form feed; $n by
- newline; $r by carriage return; $t by tab; $v by vertical tab.
- .sp
- $o<digits> or $o{<digits>} is replaced by the character whose code point is the
- given octal number. In the first form, up to three octal digits are processed.
- When more digits are needed in Unicode mode to specify a wide character, the
- second form must be used.
- .sp
- $x<digits> or $x{<digits>} is replaced by the character represented by the
- given hexadecimal number. In the first form, up to two hexadecimal digits are
- processed. When more digits are needed in Unicode mode to specify a wide
- character, the second form must be used.
- .sp
- Any other character is substituted by itself. In particular, $$ is replaced by
- a single dollar.
- .TP
- \fB-o\fP, \fB--only-matching\fP
- Show only the part of the line that matched a pattern instead of the whole
- line. In this mode, no context is shown. That is, the \fB-A\fP, \fB-B\fP, and
- \fB-C\fP options are ignored. If there is more than one match in a line, each
- of them is shown separately, on a separate line of output. If \fB-o\fP is
- combined with \fB-v\fP (invert the sense of the match to find non-matching
- lines), no output is generated, but the return code is set appropriately. If
- the matched portion of the line is empty, nothing is output unless the file
- name or line number are being printed, in which case they are shown on an
- otherwise empty line. This option is mutually exclusive with \fB--output\fP,
- \fB--file-offsets\fP and \fB--line-offsets\fP.
- .TP
- \fB-o\fP\fInumber\fP, \fB--only-matching\fP=\fInumber\fP
- Show only the part of the line that matched the capturing parentheses of the
- given number. Up to 50 capturing parentheses are supported by default. This
- limit can be changed via the \fB--om-capture\fP option. A pattern may contain
- any number of capturing parentheses, but only those whose number is within the
- limit can be accessed by \fB-o\fP. An error occurs if the number specified by
- \fB-o\fP is greater than the limit.
- .sp
- -o0 is the same as \fB-o\fP without a number. Because these options can be
- given without an argument (see above), if an argument is present, it must be
- given in the same shell item, for example, -o3 or --only-matching=2. The
- comments given for the non-argument case above also apply to this option. If
- the specified capturing parentheses do not exist in the pattern, or were not
- set in the match, nothing is output unless the file name or line number are
- being output.
- .sp
- If this option is given multiple times, multiple substrings are output for each
- match, in the order the options are given, and all on one line. For example,
- -o3 -o1 -o3 causes the substrings matched by capturing parentheses 3 and 1 and
- then 3 again to be output. By default, there is no separator (but see the next
- but one option).
- .TP
- \fB--om-capture\fP=\fInumber\fP
- Set the number of capturing parentheses that can be accessed by \fB-o\fP. The
- default is 50.
- .TP
- \fB--om-separator\fP=\fItext\fP
- Specify a separating string for multiple occurrences of \fB-o\fP. The default
- is an empty string. Separating strings are never coloured.
- .TP
- \fB-P\fP, \fB--no-ucp\fP
- Starting from release 10.43, when UTF/Unicode mode is specified with \fB-u\fP
- or \fB-U\fP, the PCRE2_UCP option is used by default. This means that the
- POSIX classes in patterns match more than just ASCII characters. For example,
- [:digit:] matches any Unicode decimal digit. The \fB--no-ucp\fP option
- suppresses PCRE2_UCP, thus restricting the POSIX classes to ASCII characters,
- as was the case in earlier releases. Note that there are now more fine-grained
- option settings within patterns that affect individual classes. For example,
- when in UCP mode, the sequence (?aP) restricts [:word:] to ASCII letters, while
- allowing \ew to match Unicode letters and digits.
- .TP
- \fB-q\fP, \fB--quiet\fP
- Work quietly, that is, display nothing except error messages. The exit
- status indicates whether or not any matches were found.
- .TP
- \fB-r\fP, \fB--recursive\fP
- If any given path is a directory, recursively scan the files it contains,
- taking note of any \fB--include\fP and \fB--exclude\fP settings. By default, a
- directory is read as a normal file; in some operating systems this gives an
- immediate end-of-file. This option is a shorthand for setting the \fB-d\fP
- option to "recurse".
- .TP
- \fB--recursion-limit\fP=\fInumber\fP
- This is an obsolete synonym for \fB--depth-limit\fP. See \fB--match-limit\fP
- above for details.
- .TP
- \fB-s\fP, \fB--no-messages\fP
- Suppress error messages about non-existent or unreadable files. Such files are
- quietly skipped. However, the return code is still 2, even if matches were
- found in other files.
- .TP
- \fB-t\fP, \fB--total-count\fP
- This option is useful when scanning more than one file. If used on its own,
- \fB-t\fP suppresses all output except for a grand total number of matching
- lines (or non-matching lines if \fB-v\fP is used) in all the files. If \fB-t\fP
- is used with \fB-c\fP, a grand total is output except when the previous output
- is just one line. In other words, it is not output when just one file's count
- is listed. If file names are being output, the grand total is preceded by
- "TOTAL:". Otherwise, it appears as just another number. The \fB-t\fP option is
- ignored when used with \fB-L\fP (list files without matches), because the grand
- total would always be zero.
- .TP
- \fB-u\fP, \fB--utf\fP
- Operate in UTF/Unicode mode. This option is available only if PCRE2 has been
- compiled with UTF-8 support. All patterns (including those for any
- \fB--exclude\fP and \fB--include\fP options) and all lines that are scanned
- must be valid strings of UTF-8 characters. If an invalid UTF-8 string is
- encountered, an error occurs.
- .TP
- \fB-U\fP, \fB--utf-allow-invalid\fP
- As \fB--utf\fP, but in addition subject lines may contain invalid UTF-8 code
- unit sequences. These can never form part of any pattern match. Patterns
- themselves, however, must still be valid UTF-8 strings. This facility allows
- valid UTF-8 strings to be sought within arbitrary byte sequences in executable
- or other binary files. For more details about matching in non-valid UTF-8
- strings, see the
- .\" HREF
- \fBpcre2unicode\fP(3)
- .\"
- documentation.
- .TP
- \fB-V\fP, \fB--version\fP
- Write the version numbers of \fBpcre2grep\fP and the PCRE2 library to the
- standard output and then exit. Anything else on the command line is
- ignored.
- .TP
- \fB-v\fP, \fB--invert-match\fP
- Invert the sense of the match, so that lines which do \fInot\fP match any of
- the patterns are the ones that are found. When this option is set, options such
- as \fB--only-matching\fP and \fB--output\fP, which specify parts of a match
- that are to be output, are ignored.
- .TP
- \fB-w\fP, \fB--word-regex\fP, \fB--word-regexp\fP
- Force the patterns only to match "words". That is, there must be a word
- boundary at the start and end of each matched string. This is equivalent to
- having "\eb(?:" at the start of each pattern, and ")\eb" at the end. This
- option applies only to the patterns that are matched against the contents of
- files; it does not apply to patterns specified by any of the \fB--include\fP or
- \fB--exclude\fP options.
- .TP
- \fB-x\fP, \fB--line-regex\fP, \fB--line-regexp\fP
- Force the patterns to start matching only at the beginnings of lines, and in
- addition, require them to match entire lines. In multiline mode the match may
- be more than one line. This is equivalent to having "^(?:" at the start of each
- pattern and ")$" at the end. This option applies only to the patterns that are
- matched against the contents of files; it does not apply to patterns specified
- by any of the \fB--include\fP or \fB--exclude\fP options.
- .TP
- \fB-Z\fP, \fB--null\fP
- Terminate files names in the regular output with a zero byte (the NUL
- character) instead of what would normally appear. This is useful when file
- names contain unusual characters such as colons, hyphens, or even newlines. The
- option does not apply to file names in error messages.
- .
- .
- .SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
- .rs
- .sp
- The environment variables \fBLC_ALL\fP and \fBLC_CTYPE\fP are examined, in that
- order, for a locale. The first one that is set is used. This can be overridden
- by the \fB--locale\fP option. If no locale is set, the PCRE2 library's default
- (usually the "C" locale) is used.
- .
- .
- .SH "NEWLINES"
- .rs
- .sp
- The \fB-N\fP (\fB--newline\fP) option allows \fBpcre2grep\fP to scan files with
- newline conventions that differ from the default. This option affects only the
- way scanned files are processed. It does not affect the interpretation of files
- specified by the \fB-f\fP, \fB--file-list\fP, \fB--exclude-from\fP, or
- \fB--include-from\fP options.
- .P
- Any parts of the scanned input files that are written to the standard output
- are copied with whatever newline sequences they have in the input. However, if
- the final line of a file is output, and it does not end with a newline
- sequence, a newline sequence is added. If the newline setting is CR, LF, CRLF
- or NUL, that line ending is output; for the other settings (ANYCRLF or ANY) a
- single NL is used.
- .P
- The newline setting does not affect the way in which \fBpcre2grep\fP writes
- newlines in informational messages to the standard output and error streams.
- Under Windows, the standard output is set to be binary, so that "\er\en" at the
- ends of output lines that are copied from the input is not converted to
- "\er\er\en" by the C I/O library. This means that any messages written to the
- standard output must end with "\er\en". For all other operating systems, and
- for all messages to the standard error stream, "\en" is used.
- .
- .
- .SH "OPTIONS COMPATIBILITY WITH GNU GREP"
- .rs
- .sp
- Many of the short and long forms of \fBpcre2grep\fP's options are the same as
- in the GNU \fBgrep\fP program. Any long option of the form \fB--xxx-regexp\fP
- (GNU terminology) is also available as \fB--xxx-regex\fP (PCRE2 terminology).
- However, the \fB--case-restrict\fP, \fB--depth-limit\fP, \fB-E\fP,
- \fB--file-list\fP, \fB--file-offsets\fP, \fB--heap-limit\fP,
- \fB--include-dir\fP, \fB--line-offsets\fP, \fB--locale\fP, \fB--match-limit\fP,
- \fB-M\fP, \fB--multiline\fP, \fB-N\fP, \fB--newline\fP, \fB--no-ucp\fP,
- \fB--om-separator\fP, \fB--output\fP, \fB-P\fP, \fB-u\fP, \fB--utf\fP,
- \fB-U\fP, and \fB--utf-allow-invalid\fP options are specific to
- \fBpcre2grep\fP, as is the use of the \fB--only-matching\fP option with a
- capturing parentheses number.
- .P
- Although most of the common options work the same way, a few are different in
- \fBpcre2grep\fP. For example, the \fB--include\fP option's argument is a glob
- for GNU \fBgrep\fP, but in \fBpcre2grep\fP it is a regular expression to which
- the \fB-i\fP option applies. If both the \fB-c\fP and \fB-l\fP options are
- given, GNU grep lists only file names, without counts, but \fBpcre2grep\fP
- gives the counts as well.
- .
- .
- .SH "OPTIONS WITH DATA"
- .rs
- .sp
- There are four different ways in which an option with data can be specified.
- If a short form option is used, the data may follow immediately, or (with one
- exception) in the next command line item. For example:
- .sp
- -f/some/file
- -f /some/file
- .sp
- The exception is the \fB-o\fP option, which may appear with or without data.
- Because of this, if data is present, it must follow immediately in the same
- item, for example -o3.
- .P
- If a long form option is used, the data may appear in the same command line
- item, separated by an equals character, or (with two exceptions) it may appear
- in the next command line item. For example:
- .sp
- --file=/some/file
- --file /some/file
- .sp
- Note, however, that if you want to supply a file name beginning with ~ as data
- in a shell command, and have the shell expand ~ to a home directory, you must
- separate the file name from the option, because the shell does not treat ~
- specially unless it is at the start of an item.
- .P
- The exceptions to the above are the \fB--colour\fP (or \fB--color\fP) and
- \fB--only-matching\fP options, for which the data is optional. If one of these
- options does have data, it must be given in the first form, using an equals
- character. Otherwise \fBpcre2grep\fP will assume that it has no data.
- .
- .
- .SH "USING PCRE2'S CALLOUT FACILITY"
- .rs
- .sp
- \fBpcre2grep\fP has, by default, support for calling external programs or
- scripts or echoing specific strings during matching by making use of PCRE2's
- callout facility. However, this support can be completely or partially disabled
- when \fBpcre2grep\fP is built. You can find out whether your binary has support
- for callouts by running it with the \fB--help\fP option. If callout support is
- completely disabled, all callouts in patterns are ignored by \fBpcre2grep\fP.
- If the facility is partially disabled, calling external programs is not
- supported, and callouts that request it are ignored.
- .P
- A callout in a PCRE2 pattern is of the form (?C<arg>) where the argument is
- either a number or a quoted string (see the
- .\" HREF
- \fBpcre2callout\fP
- .\"
- documentation for details). Numbered callouts are ignored by \fBpcre2grep\fP;
- only callouts with string arguments are useful.
- .
- .
- .SS "Echoing a specific string"
- .rs
- .sp
- Starting the callout string with a pipe character invokes an echoing facility
- that avoids calling an external program or script. This facility is always
- available, provided that callouts were not completely disabled when
- \fBpcre2grep\fP was built. The rest of the callout string is processed as a
- zero-terminated string, which means it should not contain any internal binary
- zeros. It is written to the output, having first been passed through the same
- escape processing as text from the \fB--output\fP (\fB-O\fP) option (see
- above). However, $0 cannot be used to insert a matched substring because the
- match is still in progress. Instead, the single character '0' is inserted. Any
- syntax errors in the string (for example, a dollar not followed by another
- character) causes the callout to be ignored. No terminator is added to the
- output string, so if you want a newline, you must include it explicitly using
- the escape $n. For example:
- .sp
- pcre2grep '(.)(..(.))(?C"|[$1] [$2] [$3]$n")' <some file>
- .sp
- Matching continues normally after the string is output. If you want to see only
- the callout output but not any output from an actual match, you should end the
- pattern with (*FAIL).
- .
- .
- .SS "Calling external programs or scripts"
- .rs
- .sp
- This facility can be independently disabled when \fBpcre2grep\fP is built. It
- is supported for Windows, where a call to \fB_spawnvp()\fP is used, for VMS,
- where \fBlib$spawn()\fP is used, and for any Unix-like environment where
- \fBfork()\fP and \fBexecv()\fP are available.
- .P
- If the callout string does not start with a pipe (vertical bar) character, it
- is parsed into a list of substrings separated by pipe characters. The first
- substring must be an executable name, with the following substrings specifying
- arguments:
- .sp
- executable_name|arg1|arg2|...
- .sp
- Any substring (including the executable name) may contain escape sequences
- started by a dollar character. These are the same as for the \fB--output\fP
- (\fB-O\fP) option documented above, except that $0 cannot insert the matched
- string because the match is still in progress. Instead, the character '0'
- is inserted. If you need a literal dollar or pipe character in any
- substring, use $$ or $| respectively. Here is an example:
- .sp
- echo -e "abcde\en12345" | pcre2grep \e
- '(?x)(.)(..(.))
- (?C"/bin/echo|Arg1: [$1] [$2] [$3]|Arg2: $|${1}$| ($4)")()' -
- .sp
- Output:
- .sp
- Arg1: [a] [bcd] [d] Arg2: |a| ()
- abcde
- Arg1: [1] [234] [4] Arg2: |1| ()
- 12345
- .sp
- The parameters for the system call that is used to run the program or script
- are zero-terminated strings. This means that binary zero characters in the
- callout argument will cause premature termination of their substrings, and
- therefore should not be present. Any syntax errors in the string (for example,
- a dollar not followed by another character) causes the callout to be ignored.
- If running the program fails for any reason (including the non-existence of the
- executable), a local matching failure occurs and the matcher backtracks in the
- normal way.
- .
- .
- .SH "MATCHING ERRORS"
- .rs
- .sp
- It is possible to supply a regular expression that takes a very long time to
- fail to match certain lines. Such patterns normally involve nested indefinite
- repeats, for example: (a+)*\ed when matched against a line of a's with no final
- digit. The PCRE2 matching function has a resource limit that causes it to abort
- in these circumstances. If this happens, \fBpcre2grep\fP outputs an error
- message and the line that caused the problem to the standard error stream. If
- there are more than 20 such errors, \fBpcre2grep\fP gives up.
- .P
- The \fB--match-limit\fP option of \fBpcre2grep\fP can be used to set the
- overall resource limit. There are also other limits that affect the amount of
- memory used during matching; see the discussion of \fB--heap-limit\fP and
- \fB--depth-limit\fP above.
- .
- .
- .SH DIAGNOSTICS
- .rs
- .sp
- Exit status is 0 if any matches were found, 1 if no matches were found, and 2
- for syntax errors, overlong lines, non-existent or inaccessible files (even if
- matches were found in other files) or too many matching errors. Using the
- \fB-s\fP option to suppress error messages about inaccessible files does not
- affect the return code.
- .P
- When run under VMS, the return code is placed in the symbol PCRE2GREP_RC
- because VMS does not distinguish between exit(0) and exit(1).
- .
- .
- .SH "SEE ALSO"
- .rs
- .sp
- \fBpcre2pattern\fP(3), \fBpcre2syntax\fP(3), \fBpcre2callout\fP(3),
- \fBpcre2unicode\fP(3).
- .
- .
- .SH AUTHOR
- .rs
- .sp
- .nf
- Philip Hazel
- Retired from University Computing Service
- Cambridge, England.
- .fi
- .
- .
- .SH REVISION
- .rs
- .sp
- .nf
- Last updated: 22 December 2023
- Copyright (c) 1997-2023 University of Cambridge.
- .fi
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