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NEWS
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NEWS
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GNU grep NEWS -*- outline -*-
* Noteworthy changes in release ?.? (????-??-??) [?]
** Changes in behavior
The --files-without-match (-L) option now causes grep to succeed
when a file is listed, instead of when a line is selected. This
resembles what git-grep does.
** Bug fixes
The --recursive (-r) option no longer fails on MS-Windows.
[bug introduced in grep 2.11]
** Improvements
grep now diagnoses stack overflow. Before grep-2.6, the included
regexp code would detect it. Since 2.6, grep defaulted to using
glibc's regexp, which lost that capability.
* Noteworthy changes in release 3.1 (2017-07-02) [stable]
** Improvements
grep '[0-9]' is now just as fast as grep '[[:digit:]]' when run
in a multi-byte locale. Before, it was several times slower.
** Changes in behavior
Context no longer excludes selected lines omitted because of -m.
For example, 'grep "^" -m1 -A1' now outputs the first two input
lines, not just the first line. This fixes a glitch that has been
present since -m was added in grep 2.5.
The following changes affect only MS-Windows platforms. First, the
--binary (-U) option now governs whether binary I/O is used, instead
of a heuristic that was sometimes incorrect. Second, the
--unix-byte-offsets (-u) option now has no effect on MS-Windows too.
* Noteworthy changes in release 3.0 (2017-02-09) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep without -F no longer goes awry when given two or more patterns
that contain no special characters other than '\' and also contain a
subpattern like '\.' that escapes a character to make it ordinary.
[bug introduced in grep 2.28]
grep no longer fails to build on PCRE versions before 8.20.
[bug introduced in grep 2.28]
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.28 (2017-02-06) [stable]
** Bug fixes
When grep -Fo finds matches of differing length, it could
mistakenly print a shorter one. Now it prints a longest one.
[bug introduced in grep-2.26]
When standard output is /dev/null, grep no longer fails when
standard input is a file in the Linux /proc file system, or when
standard input is a pipe and standard output is in append mode.
[bugs introduced in grep-2.27]
Fix performance regression with multiple patterns, e.g., for -Fi in
a multi-byte locale, or for -Fw in a single-byte locale.
[bugs introduced in grep-2.19, grep-2.22 and grep-2.26]
** Improvements
Improve performance for -E or -G pattern lists that are easily
converted to -F format.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.27 (2016-12-06) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep no longer reports a false match in a multibyte, non-UTF8 locale
like zh_CN.gb18030, with a regular expression like ".*7" that just
happens to match the 4-byte representation of gb18030's \uC9, the
final byte of which is the digit "7".
[bug introduced in grep-2.19]
Unless an early-exit option like -q, -l, -L, -m, or -f /dev/null is
specified, grep now reads all of a non-seekable standard input,
even if this cannot affect grep's output or exit status. This works
better with nonportable scripts that run "PROGRAM | grep PATTERN
>/dev/null" where PROGRAM dies when writing into a broken pipe.
[bug introduced in grep-2.26]
grep no longer mishandles ranges in nontrivial unibyte locales.
[bug introduced in grep-2.26]
grep -P no longer attempts multiline matches. This works more
intuitively with unusual patterns, and means that grep -Pz no longer
rejects patterns containing ^ and $ and works when combined with -x.
[bugs introduced in grep-2.23] A downside is that grep -P is now
significantly slower, albeit typically still faster than pcregrep.
grep -m0 -L PAT FILE now outputs "FILE". [bug introduced in grep-2.5]
To output ':' and tab-align the following character C, grep -T no
longer outputs tab-backspace-':'-C, an approach that has problems if
run inside an Emacs shell window. [bug introduced in grep-2.5.2]
grep -T now uses worst-case widths of line numbers and byte offsets
instead of guessing widths that might not work with larger files.
[bug introduced in grep-2.5.2]
grep's use of getprogname no longer causes a build failure on HP-UX.
** Improvements
grep no longer reads the input in a few more cases when it is easy
to see that matching cannot succeed, e.g., 'grep -f /dev/null'.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.26 (2016-10-02) [stable]
** Bug fixes
Grep no longer omits output merely because it follows an output line
suppressed due to encoding errors. [bug introduced in grep-2.21]
In the Shift_JIS locale, grep no longer mistakenly matches in the
middle of a multibyte character. [bug present since "the beginning"]
** Improvements
grep can be much faster now when standard output is /dev/null.
grep -F is now typically much faster when many patterns are given,
as it now uses the Aho-Corasick algorithm instead of the
Commentz-Walter algorithm in that case.
grep -iF is typically much faster in a multibyte locale, if the
pattern and its case counterparts contain only single byte characters.
grep with complicated expressions (e.g., back-references) and without
-i now uses the regex fastmap for better performance.
In multibyte locales, grep now handles leading "." in patterns more
efficiently.
grep now prints a "FILENAME:LINENO: " prefix when diagnosing an
invalid regular expression that was read from an '-f'-specified file.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.25 (2016-04-21) [stable]
** Bug fixes
In the C or POSIX locale, grep now treats all bytes as valid
characters even if the C runtime library says otherwise. The
revised behavior is more compatible with the original intent of
POSIX, and the next release of POSIX will likely make this official.
[bug introduced in grep-2.23]
grep -Pz no longer mistakenly diagnoses patterns like [^a] that use
negated character classes. [bug introduced in grep-2.24]
grep -oz now uses null bytes, not newlines, to terminate output lines.
[bug introduced in grep-2.5]
** Improvements
grep now outputs details more consistently when reporting a write error.
E.g., "grep: write error: No space left on device" rather than just
"grep: write error".
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.24 (2016-03-10) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep -z would match strings it should not. To trigger the bug, you'd
have to use a regular expression including an anchor (^ or $) and a
feature like a range or a backreference, causing grep to forego its DFA
matcher and resort to using re_search. With a multibyte locale, that
matcher could mistakenly match a string containing a newline.
For example, this command:
printf 'a\nb\0' | LC_ALL=en_US.utf-8 grep -z '^[a-b]*b'
would mistakenly match and print all four input bytes. After the fix,
there is no match, as expected.
[bug introduced in grep-2.7]
grep -Pz now diagnoses attempts to use patterns containing ^ and $,
instead of mishandling these patterns. This problem seems to be
inherent to the PCRE API; removing this limitation is on PCRE's
maint/README wish list. Patterns can continue to match literal ^
and $ by escaping them with \ (now needed even inside [...]).
[bug introduced in grep-2.5]
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.23 (2016-02-04) [stable]
** Bug fixes
Binary files are now less likely to generate diagnostics and more
likely to yield text matches. grep now reports "Binary file FOO
matches" and suppresses further output instead of outputting a line
containing an encoding error; hence grep can now report matching text
before a later binary match. Formerly, grep reported FOO to be
binary when it found an encoding error in FOO before generating
output for FOO, which meant it never reported both matching text and
matching binary data; this was less useful for searching text
containing encoding errors in non-matching lines.
[bug introduced in grep-2.21]
grep -c no longer stops counting when finding binary data.
[bug introduced in grep-2.21]
grep no longer outputs encoding errors in unibyte locales.
For example, if the byte '\x81' is not a valid character in a
unibyte locale, grep treats the byte as binary data.
[bug introduced in grep-2.21]
grep -oP is no longer susceptible to an infinite loop when processing
invalid UTF8 just before a match.
[bug introduced in grep-2.22]
--exclude and related options are now matched against trailing
parts of command-line arguments, not against the entire arguments.
This partly reverts the --exclude-related change in 2.22.
[bug introduced in grep-2.22]
--line-buffer is no longer ineffective when combined with -l.
[bug introduced in grep-2.5]
-xw is now equivalent to -x more consistently, with -P and with backrefs.
[bug only partially fixed in grep-2.19]
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.22 (2015-11-01) [stable]
** Improvements
Performance has improved for patterns containing very long strings,
reducing preprocessing time for an N-byte regexp from O(N^2) to
only slightly superlinear for most patterns. Before, a command like
the following would take over a minute, but now, it takes less than
a second:
: | grep -f <(seq -s '' 99999)
When building grep, 'configure' now uses PCRE's pkg-config module for
configuration information, rather than attempting to guess it by hand.
** Bug fixes
A DFA matcher bug made this command mistakenly print its input line:
echo axb | grep -E '^x|x$'
Likewise for this equivalent command:
echo axb | grep -e '^x' -e 'x$'
[bug introduced in grep-2.19 ]
grep no longer reads from uninitialized memory or from beyond the end
of the heap-allocated input buffer. This fix addressed CVE-2015-1345.
[bug introduced in grep-2.19 ]
With -z, '.' and '[^x]' in a pattern now consistently match newline.
Previously, they sometimes matched newline, and sometimes did not.
[bug introduced in grep-2.4]
When the JIT stack is exhausted, grep -P now grows the stack rather
than reporting an internal PCRE error.
'grep -D skip PATTERN FILE' no longer hangs if FILE is a fifo.
[bug introduced in grep-2.12]
--exclude and related options are now matched against entire
command-line arguments, not against command-line components.
[bug introduced in grep-2.6]
Fix performance degradation of grep -Fw in unibyte locales.
[bug introduced in grep-2.19 ]
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.21 (2014-11-23) [stable]
** Improvements
Performance has been greatly improved for searching files containing
holes, on platforms where lseek's SEEK_DATA flag works efficiently.
Performance has improved for rejecting data that cannot match even
the first part of a nontrivial pattern.
Performance has improved for very long strings in patterns.
If a file contains data improperly encoded for the current locale,
and this is discovered before any of the file's contents are output,
grep now treats the file as binary.
grep -P no longer reports an error and exits when given invalid UTF-8 data.
Instead, it considers the data to be non-matching.
** Bug fixes
grep no longer mishandles patterns that contain \w or \W in multibyte
locales.
grep would fail to count newlines internally when operating in non-UTF8
multibyte locales, leading it to print potentially many lines that did
not match. E.g., the command, "seq 10 | env LC_ALL=zh_CN src/grep -n .."
would print this:
1:1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
implying that the match, "10" was on line 1.
[bug introduced in grep-2.19]
grep -F -x -o no longer prints an extra newline for each match.
[bug introduced in grep-2.19]
grep in a non-UTF8 multibyte locale could mistakenly match in the middle
of a multibyte character when using a '^'-anchored alternate in a pattern,
leading it to print non-matching lines. [bug present since "the beginning"]
grep -F Y no longer fails to match in non-UTF8 multibyte locales like
Shift-JIS, when the input contains a 2-byte character, XY, followed by
the single-byte search pattern, Y. grep would find the first, middle-
of-multibyte matching "Y", and then mistakenly advance an internal
pointer one byte too far, skipping over the target "Y" just after that.
[bug introduced in grep-2.19]
grep -E rejected unmatched ')', instead of treating it like '\)'.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
On NetBSD, grep -r no longer reports "Inappropriate file type or format"
when refusing to follow a symbolic link.
[bug introduced in grep-2.12]
** Changes in behavior
The GREP_OPTIONS environment variable is now obsolescent, and grep
now warns if it is used. Please use an alias or script instead.
In locales with multibyte character encodings other than UTF-8,
grep -P now reports an error and exits instead of misbehaving.
When searching binary data, grep now may treat non-text bytes as
line terminators. This can boost performance significantly.
grep -z no longer automatically treats the byte '\200' as binary data.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.20 (2014-06-03) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep --max-count=N FILE would no longer stop reading after the Nth match.
I.e., while grep would still print the correct output, it would continue
reading until end of input, and hence, potentially forever.
[bug introduced in grep-2.19]
A command like echo aa|grep -E 'a(b$|c$)' would mistakenly
report the input as a matched line.
[bug introduced in grep-2.19]
** Changes in behavior
grep --exclude-dir='FOO/' now excludes the directory FOO.
Previously, the trailing slash meant the option was ineffective.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.19 (2014-05-22) [stable]
** Improvements
Performance has improved, typically by 10% and in some cases by a
factor of 200. However, performance of grep -P in UTF-8 locales has
gotten worse as part of the fix for the crashes mentioned below.
** Bug fixes
grep no longer mishandles patterns like [a-[.z.]], and no longer
mishandles patterns like [^a] in locales that have multicharacter
collating sequences so that [^a] can match a string of two characters.
grep no longer mishandles an empty pattern at the end of a pattern list.
[bug introduced in grep-2.5]
grep -C NUM now outputs separators consistently even when NUM is zero,
and similarly for grep -A NUM and grep -B NUM.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
grep -f no longer mishandles patterns containing NUL bytes.
[bug introduced in grep-2.11]
Plain grep, grep -E, and grep -F now treat encoding errors in patterns
the same way the GNU regular expression matcher treats them, with respect
to whether the errors can match parts of multibyte characters in data.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
grep -w no longer mishandles a potential match adjacent to a letter that
takes up two or more bytes in a multibyte encoding.
Similarly, the patterns '\<', '\>', '\b', and '\B' no longer
mishandle word-boundary matches in multibyte locales.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
grep -P now reports an error and exits when given invalid UTF-8 data.
Previously it was unreliable, and sometimes crashed or looped.
[bug introduced in grep-2.16]
grep -P now works with -w and -x and backreferences. Before,
echo aa|grep -Pw '(.)\1' would fail to match, yet
echo aa|grep -Pw '(.)\2' would match.
grep -Pw now works like grep -w in that the matched string has to be
preceded and followed by non-word components or the beginning and end
of the line (as opposed to word boundaries before). Before, this
echo a@@a| grep -Pw @@ would match, yet this
echo a@@a| grep -w @@ would not. Now, they both fail to match,
per the documentation on how grep's -w works.
grep -i no longer mishandles patterns containing titlecase characters.
For example, in a locale containing the titlecase character
'Lj' (U+01C8 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L WITH SMALL LETTER J),
'grep -i Lj' now matches both 'LJ' (U+01C7 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER LJ)
and 'lj' (U+01C9 LATIN SMALL LETTER LJ).
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.18 (2014-02-20) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep no longer mishandles patterns like [^^-~] in unibyte locales.
[bug introduced in grep-2.8]
grep -i in a multibyte, non-UTF8 locale could be up to 200 times slower
than in 2.16. [bug introduced in grep-2.17]
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.17 (2014-02-17) [stable]
** Improvements
grep -i in a multibyte locale is now typically 10 times faster
for patterns that do not contain \ or [.
grep (without -i) in a multibyte locale is now up to 7 times faster
when processing many matched lines.
** Maintenance
grep's --mmap option was disabled in March of 2010, and began to
elicit a warning in January of 2012. Now it is completely gone.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.16 (2014-01-01) [stable]
** Bug fixes
Fix gnulib-provided maint.mk so that the release procedure described
in README-release actually does what we want. Before that fix, that
procedure resulted in a grep-2.15 tarball that would lead to a grep
binary whose --version-reported version number was 2.14.51...
The fix to make \s and \S work with multi-byte white space broke
the use of each shortcut whenever followed by a repetition operator.
For example, \s*, \s+, \s? and \s{3} would all malfunction in a
multi-byte locale. [bug introduced in grep-2.15]
The fix to make grep -P work better with UTF-8 made it possible for
grep to evoke a larger set of PCRE errors, some of which could trigger
an abort. E.g., this would abort:
printf '\x82'|LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 grep -P y
Now grep handles arbitrary PCRE errors. [bug introduced in grep-2.15]
Handle very long lines (2GiB and longer) on systems with a deficient
read system call.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.15 (2013-10-26) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep's \s and \S failed to work with multi-byte white space characters.
For example, \s would fail to match a non-breaking space, and this
would print nothing: printf '\xc2\xa0' | LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 grep '\s'
A related bug is that \S would mistakenly match an invalid multibyte
character. For example, the following would match:
printf '\x82\n' | LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 grep '^\S$'
[bug present since grep-2.6]
grep -i would segfault on systems using UTF-16-based wchar_t (Cygwin)
when converting an input string containing certain 4-byte UTF-8
sequences to lower case. The conversions to wchar_t and back to
a UTF-8 multibyte string did not take surrogate pairs into account.
[bug present since at least grep-2.6, though the segfault is new with 2.13]
grep -E would segfault when given a regexp like '([^.]*[M]){1,2}'
for any multibyte character M. [bug introduced in grep-2.6, which would
segfault, but 2.7 and 2.8 had no problem, and 2.9 through 2.14 would
hit a failed assertion. ]
grep -F would get stuck in an infinite loop when given a search string
that is an invalid byte sequence in the current locale and that matches
the bytes of the input twice on a line. Now grep fails with exit status 1.
grep -P could misbehave. While multi-byte mode is only supported by PCRE
with UTF-8 locales, grep did not activate it. This would cause failures
to match multibyte characters against some regular expressions, especially
those including the '.' or '\p' metacharacters.
** New features
grep -P can now use a just-in-time compiler to greatly speed up matches,
This feature is transparent to the user; no flag is required to enable
it. It is only available if the corresponding support in the PCRE
library is detected when grep is compiled.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.14 (2012-08-20) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep -i '^$' could exit 0 (i.e., report a match) in a multi-byte locale,
even though there was no match, and the command generated no output.
E.g., seq 2 | LC_ALL=en_US.utf8 grep -il '^$' would mistakenly print
"(standard input)". Related, seq 9 | LC_ALL=en_US.utf8 grep -in '^$'
would print "2:4:6:8:10:12:14:16" and exit 0. Now it prints nothing
and exits with status of 1. [bug introduced in grep-2.6]
'grep' no longer falsely reports text files as being binary on file
systems that compress contents or that store tiny contents in metadata.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.13 (2012-07-04) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep -i, in a multi-byte locale, when matching a line containing a character
like the UTF-8 Turkish I-with-dot (U+0130) (whose lower-case representation
occupies fewer bytes), would print an incomplete output line.
Similarly, with a matched line containing a character (e.g., the Latin
capital I in a Turkish UTF-8 locale), where the lower-case representation
occupies more bytes, grep could print garbage.
[bug introduced in grep-2.6]
--include and --exclude can again be combined, and again apply to
the command line, e.g., "grep --include='*.[ch]' --exclude='system.h'
PATTERN *" again reads all *.c and *.h files except for system.h.
[bug introduced in grep-2.6]
** New features
'grep' without -z now treats a sparse file as binary, if it can
easily determine that the file is sparse.
** Dropped features
Bootstrapping with Makefile.boot has been broken since grep 2.6,
and was removed.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.12 (2012-04-23) [stable]
** Bug fixes
"echo P|grep --devices=skip P" once again prints P, as it did in 2.10
[bug introduced in grep-2.11]
grep no longer segfaults with -r --exclude-dir and no file operand.
I.e., ":|grep -r --exclude-dir=D PAT" would segfault.
[bug introduced in grep-2.11]
Recursive grep now uses fts for directory traversal, so it can
handle much-larger directories without reporting things like "File
name too long", and it can run much faster when dealing with large
directory hierarchies. [bug present since the beginning]
grep -E 'a{1000000000}' now reports an overflow error rather than
silently acting like grep -E 'a\{1000000000}'.
grep -E 'a{,10}' was not treated equivalently to grep -E 'a{0,10}'.
** New features
The -R option now has a long-option alias --dereference-recursive.
** Changes in behavior
The -r (--recursive) option now follows only command-line symlinks.
Also, by default -r now reads a device only if it is named on the command
line; this can be overridden with --devices. -R acts as before, so
use -R if you prefer the old behavior of following all symlinks and
defaulting to reading all devices.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.11 (2012-03-02) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep no longer dumps core on lines whose lengths do not fit in 'int'.
(e.g., lines longer than 2 GiB on a typical 64-bit host).
Instead, grep either works as expected, or reports an error.
An error can occur if not enough main memory is available, or if the
GNU C library's regular expression functions cannot handle such long lines.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
The -m, -A, -B, and -C options no longer mishandle context line
counts that do not fit in 'int'. Also, grep -c's counts are now
limited by the type 'intmax_t' (typically less than 2**63) rather
than 'int' (typically less than 2**31).
grep no longer silently suppresses errors when reading a directory
as if it were a text file. For example, "grep x ." now reports a
read error on most systems; formerly, it ignored the error.
[bug introduced in grep-2.5]
grep now exits with status 2 if a directory loop is found,
instead of possibly exiting with status 0 or 1.
[bug introduced in grep-2.3]
The -s option now suppresses certain input error diagnostics that it
formerly failed to suppress. These include errors when closing the
input, when lseeking the input, and when the input is also the output.
[bug introduced in grep-2.4]
On POSIX systems, commands like "grep PAT < FILE >> FILE"
now report an error instead of looping.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
The --include, --exclude, and --exclude-dir options now handle
command-line arguments more consistently. --include and --exclude
apply only to non-directories and --exclude-dir applies only to
directories. "-" (standard input) is never excluded, since it is
not a file name.
[bug introduced in grep-2.5]
grep no longer rejects "grep -qr . > out", i.e., when run with -q
and an input file is the same as the output file, since with -q
grep generates no output, so there is no risk of infinite loop or
of an output-affecting race condition. Thus, the use of the following
options also disables the input-equals-output failure:
--max-count=N (-m) (for N >= 2)
--files-with-matches (-l)
--files-without-match (-L)
[bug introduced in grep-2.10]
grep no longer emits an error message and quits on MS-Windows when
invoked with the -r option.
grep no longer misinterprets some alternations involving anchors
(^, $, \< \> \B, \b). For example, grep -E "(^|\B)a" no
longer reports a match for the string "x a".
[bug present since "the beginning"]
** New features
If no file operand is given, and a command-line -r or equivalent
option is given, grep now searches the working directory. Formerly
grep ignored the -r and searched standard input nonrecursively.
An -r found in GREP_OPTIONS does not have this new effect.
grep now supports color highlighting of matches on MS-Windows.
** Changes in behavior
Use of the --mmap option now elicits a warning. It has been a no-op
since March of 2010.
grep no longer diagnoses write errors repeatedly; it exits after
diagnosing the first write error. This is better behavior when
writing to a dangling pipe.
Syntax errors in GREP_COLORS are now ignored, instead of sometimes
eliciting warnings. This is more consistent with programs that
(e.g.) ignore errors in termcap entries.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.10 (2011-11-16) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep no longer mishandles high-bit-set pattern bytes on systems
where "char" is a signed type. [bug appears to affect only MS-Windows]
On POSIX systems, grep now rejects a command like "grep -r pattern . > out",
in which the output file is also one of the inputs,
because it can result in an "infinite" disk-filling loop.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
** Build-related
"make dist" no longer builds .tar.gz files.
xz is portable enough and in wide-enough use that distributing
only .tar.xz files is enough.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.9 (2011-06-21) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep no longer clobbers heap for an ERE like '(^| )*( |$)'
[bug introduced in grep-2.6]
grep is faster on regular expressions that match multibyte characters
in brackets (such as '[áéíóú]').
echo c|grep '[c]' would fail for any c in 0x80..0xff, with a uni-byte
encoding for which the byte-to-wide-char mapping is nontrivial. For
example, the ISO-88591 locales are not affected, but ru_RU.KOI8-R is.
[bug introduced in grep-2.6]
grep -P no longer aborts when PCRE's backtracking limit is exceeded
Before, echo aaaaaaaaaaaaaab |grep -P '((a+)*)+$' would abort. Now,
it diagnoses the problem and exits with status 2.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.8 (2011-05-13) [stable]
** Bug fixes
echo c|grep '[c]' would fail for any c in 0x80..0xff, and in many locales.
E.g., printf '\xff\n'|grep "$(printf '[\xff]')" || echo FAIL
would print FAIL rather than the required matching line.
[bug introduced in grep-2.6]
grep's interpretation of range expression is now more consistent with
that of other tools. [bug present since multi-byte character set
support was introduced in 2.5.2, though the steps needed to reproduce
it changed in grep-2.6]
grep erroneously returned with exit status 1 on some memory allocation
failure. [bug present since "the beginning"]
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.7 (2010-09-16) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep --include=FILE works once again, rather than working like --exclude=FILE
[bug introduced in grep-2.6]
Searching with grep -Fw for an empty string would not match an
empty line. [bug present since "the beginning"]
X{0,0} is implemented correctly. It used to be a synonym of X{0,1}.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
In multibyte locales, regular expressions including backreferences
no longer exhibit quadratic complexity (i.e., they are orders
of magnitude faster). [bug present since multi-byte character set
support was introduced in 2.5.2]
In UTF-8 locales, regular expressions including "." can be orders
of magnitude faster. For example, "grep ." is now twice as fast
as "grep -v ^$", instead of being immensely slower. It remains
slow in other multibyte locales. [bug present since multi-byte
character set support was introduced in 2.5.2]
--mmap was meant to be ignored in 2.6.x, but it was instead
removed by mistake. [bug introduced in 2.6]
** New features
grep now diagnoses (and fails with exit status 2) commonly mistyped
regular expression like [:space:], [:digit:], etc. Before, those were
silently interpreted as [ac:eps] and [dgit:] respectively. Virtually
all who make that class of mistake should have used [[:space:]] or
[[:digit:]]. This new behavior is disabled when the POSIXLY_CORRECT
environment variable is set.
On systems using glibc, grep can support equivalence classes. However,
whether they actually work depends on glibc's locale definitions.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.6.3 (2010-04-02) [stable]
** Bug fixes
Searching with grep -F for an empty string in a multibyte locale
would hang grep. [bug introduced in 2.6.2]
PCRE support is once again detected on systems with <pcre/pcre.h>
[bug introduced in 2.6.2]
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.6.2 (2010-03-29) [stable]
** Bug fixes
grep -F no longer mistakenly reports a match when searching
for an incomplete prefix of a multibyte character.
[bug present since "the beginning"]
grep -F no longer goes into an infinite loop when it finds a match for an
incomplete (non-prefix of a) multibyte character. [bug introduced in 2.6]
Using any of the --include or --exclude* options would cause a NULL
dereference. [bugs introduced in 2.6]
** Build-related
configure no longer relies on pkg-config to detect PCRE support.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.6.1 (2010-03-25) [stable]
** Bug fixes
Character classes could cause a segmentation fault if they included a
multibyte character. [bug introduced in 2.6]
Character ranges would not work in single-byte character sets other
than C (for example, ISO-8859-1 or KOI8-R) and some multi-byte locales.
For example, this should print "1", but would find no match:
$ echo 1 | env -i LC_COLLATE=en_US.UTF-8 grep '[0-9]'
[bug introduced in 2.6]
The output of grep was incorrect for whole-word (-w) matches if the
patterns included a back-reference. [bug introduced in grep-2.5.2]
** Portability
Avoid a link failure on Solaris 8.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.6 (2010-03-23) [stable]
** Speed improvements
grep is much faster on multibyte character sets, especially (but not
limited to) UTF-8 character sets. The speed improvement is also very
pronounced with case-insensitive matches.
** Bug fixes
Character classes would malfunction in multi-byte locales when using grep -i.
Examples which would print nothing for LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 include:
- for ranges, echo Z | grep -i '[a-z]'
- for single characters, echo Y | grep -i '[y]'
- for character types, echo Y | grep -i '[[:lower:]]'
grep -i -o would fail to report some matches; grep -i --color, while not
missing any line containing a match, would fail to color some matches.
grep would fail to report a match in a multibyte character set other than
UTF-8, if another match occurred earlier in the line but started in the
middle of a multibyte character.
Various bugs in grep -P, caused by expressions such as [^b] or \S matching
newlines, were fixed. grep -P also supports the special sequences \Z and
\z, and can be combined with the command-line option -z to perform searches
on NUL-separated records.
grep would mistakenly exit with status 1 upon error, rather than 2,
as it is documented to do.
Using options like -1 -2 or -1 -v -2 results in two lines of
context (the last value that appears on the command line) instead
twelve (the concatenation of all the values). This is consistent
with the behavior of options -A/-B/-C.
Two new command-line options, --group-separator=ARGUMENT and
--no-group-separator, enable further customization of the output
when -A, -B or -C is being used.
** Other changes
egrep accepts the -E option and fgrep accepts the -F option. If egrep
and fgrep are given another of the -E/-F/-G options, they print a more
meaningful error message.
* Noteworthy changes in release 2.5.4 (2009-02-10) [stable]
- This is a bugfix release. No new features.
Version 2.5.3
- The new option --exclude-dir allows to specify a directory pattern that
will be excluded from recursive grep.
- Numerous bug fixes
Version 2.5.1
- This is a bugfix release. No new features.
Version 2.5
- The new option --label allows to specify a different name for input
from stdin. See the man or info pages for details.
- The internal lib/getopt* files are no longer used on systems providing
getopt functionality in their libc (e.g. glibc 2.2.x).
If you need the old getopt files, use --with-included-getopt.
- The new option --only-matching (-o) will print only the part of matching
lines that matches the pattern. This is useful, for example, to extract
IP addresses from log files.
- i18n bug fixed ([A-Z0-9] wouldn't match A in locales other than C on
systems using recent glibc builds
- GNU grep can now be built with autoconf 2.52.
- The new option --devices controls how grep handles device files. Its usage
is analogous to --directories.
- The new option --line-buffered fflush on everyline. There is a noticeable
slow down when forcing line buffering.
- Back references are now local to the regex.
grep -e '\(a\)\1' -e '\(b\)\1'
The last backref \1 in the second expression refer to \(b\)
- The new option --include=PATTERN will search only matching files
when recursing in directories
- The new option --exclude=PATTERN will skip matching files when
recursing in directories.
- The new option --color will use the environment variable GREP_COLOR
(default is red) to highlight the matching string.
--color takes an optional argument specifying when to colorize a line:
--color=always, --color=tty, --color=never
- The following changes are for POSIX conformance:
. The -q or --quiet or --silent option now causes grep to exit
with zero status when a input line is selected, even if an error
also occurs.
. The -s or --no-messages option no longer affects the exit status.
. Bracket regular expressions like [a-z] are now locale-dependent.
For example, many locales sort characters in dictionary order,
and in these locales the regular expression [a-d] is not
equivalent to [abcd]; it might be equivalent to [aBbCcDd], for
example. To obtain the traditional interpretation of bracket
expressions, you can use the C locale by setting the LC_ALL
environment variable to the value "C".
- The -C or --context option now requires an argument, partly for
consistency, and partly because POSIX recommends against
optional arguments.
- The new -P or --perl-regexp option tells grep to interpret the pattern as
a Perl regular expression.
- The new option --max-count=num makes grep stop reading a file after num
matching lines.
New option -m; equivalent to --max-count.
- Translations for bg, ca, da, nb and tr have been added.
Version 2.4.2
- Added more check in configure to default the grep-${version}/src/regex.c
instead of the one in GNU Lib C.
Version 2.4.1
- If the final byte of an input file is not a newline, grep now silently
supplies one.
- The new option --binary-files=TYPE makes grep assume that a binary input
file is of type TYPE.
--binary-files='binary' (the default) outputs a 1-line summary of matches.
--binary-files='without-match' assumes binary files do not match.
--binary-files='text' treats binary files as text
(equivalent to the -a or --text option).
- New option -I; equivalent to --binary-files='without-match'.
Version 2.4:
- egrep is now equivalent to 'grep -E' as required by POSIX,
removing a longstanding source of confusion and incompatibility.
'grep' is now more forgiving about stray '{'s, for backward
compatibility with traditional egrep.
- The lower bound of an interval is not optional.
You must use an explicit zero, e.g. 'x{0,10}' instead of 'x{,10}'.
(The old documentation incorrectly claimed that it was optional.)
- The --revert-match option has been renamed to --invert-match.
- The --fixed-regexp option has been renamed to --fixed-strings.
- New option -H or --with-filename.
- New option --mmap. By default, GNU grep now uses read instead of mmap.
This is faster on some hosts, and is safer on all.
- The new option -z or --null-data causes 'grep' to treat a zero byte
(the ASCII NUL character) as a line terminator in input data, and
to treat newlines as ordinary data.
- The new option -Z or --null causes 'grep' to output a zero byte
instead of the normal separator after a file name.
- These two options can be used with commands like 'find -print0',