Find All Files Containing a String or Text on Linux and Mac
Let's look at how grep works on Linux and Mac, to find specific strings of text.
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Join For FreeSometimes on Linux/UNIX computers, you will want to do a search for any files containing a particular string within it. This can be particularly useful when searching for specific things for a CI/CD pipeline.
On Linux or Mac, if we want to search a set of files for a specific string in a terminal, we use the grep.
Find All Files Which Contain a Particular String on Linux or Mac
Return the Filename Only
The below will find any file that contains the term 'html' in the '/views' directory. It will return only the file names.
grep -rl ./views -e 'html'
Return the Text Itself
Again, this will find any file containing the string 'html' in the '/views' directory. It will return the line which has that text in it.
grep -r ./views -e 'html'
How To Use Grep on Linux/Mac
You can string other options together, to get different results. When we say -r
, for example, we mean 'recursive' - i.e. it will search through every folder. When we write -rl
, this means essentially -r -l
, which means search recursively, and return only the file name.
Below is a list of all grep options or switches, which you can add to your query to get the results you need:
- -r - search recursively.
- -l - return only the file name.
- -i - ignore the case.
- -w - search only for words, i.e. not text within words. For example, if we search for 'html', then somehtmltext would not match.
- -n - returns the line number, but doesn't work with -l.
- -s - suppress any error messages.
- -h - output the line itself, without the line number or file.
- -v - invert the search, i.e. searching for html with -v will return everything without html.
- -f - used to indicate a file you want to use which contains a regular expression.
- -x - match only if the whole lines only. This will only return for a search of html if that exists on its own line separately.
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