Print lines matching a pattern
The grep command searches one or more input files
for lines containing a match to a specified pattern.
By default, grep prints the matching lines.
- Developed at Base:System
- Sources inherited from project openSUSE:Factory
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Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
efgrep-warning.patch | 0000000292 292 Bytes | |
grep-3.11.tar.xz | 0001703776 1.62 MB | |
grep-3.11.tar.xz.sig | 0000000833 833 Bytes | |
grep-rpmlintrc | 0000000107 107 Bytes | |
grep.changes | 0000044093 43.1 KB | |
grep.keyring | 0000239717 234 KB | |
grep.spec | 0000002857 2.79 KB | |
profile.sh | 0000000491 491 Bytes |
Revision 89 (latest revision is 91)
Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar_suse)
accepted
request 1089292
from
Dirk Mueller (dirkmueller)
(revision 89)
- update to 3.11: * With -P, patterns like [\d] now work again. Fixing this has caused grep to revert to the behavior of grep 3.8, in that patterns like \w and ^H go back to using ASCII rather than Unicode interpretations. However, future versions of GNU grep and/or PCRE2 are likely to fix this and change the behavior of \w and ^H back to Unicode again, without breaking [\d] as 3.10 did.
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