srch
is a cli to run text expressions and perform basic text operations such
as filtering, ignoring and replacing on the command line. There are many great
tools that do this job. But most other tools have one in common: They are hard
to memorize if you dont use them regularly. srch
tries to solve this issue by
providing a super simple cli & expression language which can be easily
memorized and is well documented.
$ srch for 'equals "foobar"' -m word # matches all occurences `foobar` in the text
$ srch for 'length 20' # matches all lines with 20 chars
$ srch not 'numeric or special' # ignores all lines which contain only numbers and special chars
$ srch replace 'numeric and length 5' 12345 -m word # replaces all 5 digit numbers with `12345`
Task | srch |
grep |
---|---|---|
Find all words containing a string | srch for 'contains "substr"' -m word |
grep -oh "\w*substr\w*" |
Find all lines in a file with a specific length | srch for 'length 10' |
grep -x '.\{10\}' |
Ignore all lines containing a string | srch not 'contains "hide me"' |
grep -v "hide me" |
Replacing all words following a specific pattern | srch replace 'numeric and length 5' 12345 -m word |
grep itself cant replace, you need to use sed for that (which gets even more complicated). |
Replacing all email addresses in a file with your email | srch replace 'contains "@" and contains ".com"' [email protected] -m word |
Same as above. |
As said earlier: srch
is no direct competitor to grep
, awk
, etc.! If you
find yourself reaching the limits of the text expression language, you probably
want to use more advanced tools.
At the moment srch
can be installed only via cargo
using:
$ cargo install srch
There are the following global options:
-m
/--mode
, sets the operation mode, can be eitherline
orword
, defaults toline
And there are the following global flags:
-f
/ --first`, print only the first match if available-l
/ --last`, print only the last match if available--skip n
, skip the first n matches--limit n
, show at most n matches
srch for [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] <EXPRESSION> [FILE]
srch not [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] <EXPRESSION> [FILE]
srch replace [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] <EXPRESSION> <REPLACEMENT> [FILE]
If no file is provided srch
tries to read from stdin.
$ docker ps | srch for 'alphanumeric and length 12' -m word # prints all docker container ids
This is a super simple format of writing readable and easy to memorize text processing expressions - there are many great and far more advanced languages and tools to process text on the commandline out there but all of them have one problem in common - they're unreadable and hard to memorize if not used often.
The Text Expression Languages provides only 9 Attributes to query by. These attributes indicate the format of a string which gets tested against it.
Attribute | Resolve to true if the tested string |
---|---|
starts <str> |
starts with the given string |
ends <str> |
ends with the given string |
contains <str> |
contains a substring equal to the given string |
equals <str> |
exactly equals the given string |
length <int> |
has the given length |
numeric |
contains only numeric chars |
alpha |
contains only alphabetic chars |
alphanumeric |
contains only alphanumeric chars |
special |
contains only special chars |
Currently there are only two binary logical operations: and
and or
Operator | Boolean Algebra |
---|---|
and |
Conjunction |
or |
Disjunction |
Attributes can be concattenated by logical operators.
starts "FOO" and ends "BAR"
contains "@" and contains ".com"
length 5 and length 10
numeric and length 8
This Syntax might not cover all use cases. It's not meant to do that. If you find yourself reaching the limits of this language you might want to use more advanced tools (such as awk, grep, sed..)