This commit adds a new --no-ignore-exclude flag that permits disabling
the use of .git/info/exclude filtering. Local exclusions are manual
configurations to a repository and are not shared, so it is sometimes
useful to disable to get a consistent view of a repository.
This also adds a new section to the man page that describes automatic
filtering.
Closes#1420
Previously, ripgrep would always defer to the regex engine's capturing
matches in order to implement word matching. Namely, ripgrep would
determine the correct match offsets via a capturing group, since the
word regex is itself generated from the user supplied regex.
Unfortunately, the regex engine's capturing mode is still fairly slow,
so this commit adds a fast path to avoid capturing mode in the vast
majority of cases. See comments in the code for details.
When the -w/--word-regexp was used, ripgrep would in many cases fail to
apply literal optimizations. This occurs specifically when the regex
given by the user is an alternation of literals with no common prefixes
or suffixes, e.g.,
rg -w 'foo|bar|baz|quux'
In this case, the inner literal detector fails. Normally, this would
result in literal prefixes being detected by the regex engine. But
because of the -w/--word-regexp flag, the actual regex that we run ends
up looking like this:
(^|\W)(foo|bar|baz|quux)($|\W)
which of course defeats any prefix or suffix literal optimizations in
the regex crate's somewhat naive extractor. (A better extractor could
still do literal optimizations in the above case.)
So this commit fixes this by falling back to prefix or suffix literals
when they're available instead of prematurely giving up and assuming the
regex engine will do the rest.
This fixes an interesting performance bug where the inner literal
extractor would sometimes choose a sub-optimal literal. For example,
consider the regex:
\x20+Sherlock Holmes\x20+
(The `\x20` is the ASCII code for a space character, which we use here
to just make it clearer. It otherwise does not matter.)
Previously, this would see the initial \x20 and then stop collecting
literals after the `+` repetition operator. This was because the inner
literal detector was adapter from the prefix literal detector, which had
to stop here. Namely, while \x20S would be a valid prefix (for example),
\x20\x20S would also be a valid prefix. As would \x20\x20\x20S and so
on. So the prefix detector would have to stop at the repetition
operator. Otherwise, only searching for \x20S could potentially scan
farther then the starting position of the next match.
However, for inner literals, this calculus no longer makes sense. We can
freely search for, e.g., \x20S without missing matches that start with
\x20\x20S precisely because we know this is an inner literal which may
not correspond to the start of a match.
With this fix, the literal that is now detected is
\x20Sherlock Holmes\x20
Which is much better. We achieve this by no longer "cutting" literals
after seeing a `+` repetition operator. Instead, we permit literals to
continue to be extended.
The reason why this is important is because using \x20 as the literal to
search for is generally bad juju since it is so common. In fact, we
should probably add more logic here to either avoid such things or give
up entirely on the inner literal optimization if it detected a literal
that we think is very common. But we punt on such things here.
I improved the help documentation in the following manner and for the
following reasons:
1. It's only logical to put the default sub-option on the first possible
line, as well as to separately mention that it is indeed the default
sub-option.
2. Additional options for the flags should describe the main points of
their purpose without requiring user to read the whole help entry. In my
opinion, the information sub-options' influence on multi-threading and
speed are important enough to warrant their inclusion in each
sub-option's description line text.
Closes#1434
This flag, when used in conjunction with --count or --count-matches,
will print a result for each file searched even if there were zero
matches in that file. This is off by default but can be enabled to make
ripgrep behave more like grep.
This also clarifies some of the defaults for the
grep-printer::SummaryBuilder type.
Closes#1370, Closes#1405
`benches/bench.rs` uses lazy_static but Cargo.toml does not declare a
dependency on it. This causes rustc to use its own internal private
copy instead. Sometimes this causes unintuitive errors like this Debian
bug: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=942243
The underlying issue is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust#27812 but it
can be avoided by explicitly declaring the dependency, which you are
supposed to do anyways.
Closes#1435
--context-separator='' still adds a new line separator, which could
still potentially be useful. So we add a new `--no-context-separator`
flag that completely disables context separators even when the -A/-B/-C
context flags are used.
Closes#1390
I'm surprised this wasn't caught until now, but if a test directory
already exists, then it was reused. This can result in hard to debug
problems with tests when, e.g., file names are changed and a recursive
search is executed.
This commit adds a simple `.exists()` check for `.gitignore`,
`.ignore`, and other similar files before actually calling
`File::open(…)` in `GitIgnoreBuilder::add`.
The reason is that a simple existence check via `stat` can be faster
than actually trying to `open` the file, see
https://stackoverflow.com/a/12774387/704831. As we typically expect(?)
the number of directories *without* ignore files to be much larger
than the number of directories *with* ignore files, this leads to an
overall speedup.
The performance gain is not huge for `rg`, but can be quite significant
if more `.gitignore`-like files are added via
`add_custom_ignore_filename`. The speedup is *larger* for folders with
*low* files-per-directory ratios.
Note though that we do not do this check on Windows until a specific
analysis there suggests this is beneficial. Namely, Windows generally
has slower file system operations, so it's not clear whether this
speculative check is actually a benefit or not.
Benchmark results
-----------------
`rg --files` in my home folder (200k results, 6.5 files per directory):
| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./rg-master --files` | 396.4 ± 3.2 | 390.9 | 400.0 | 1.05 |
| `./rg-feature --files` | 376.0 ± 3.6 | 369.3 | 383.5 | 1.00 |
`rg --files --hidden` in my home folder (800k results, 5.4
files per directory)
| Command | Mean [s] | Min [s] | Max [s] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./rg-master --files --hidden` | 1.575 ± 0.012 | 1.560 | 1.597 | 1.06 |
| `./rg-feature --files --hidden` | 1.479 ± 0.011 | 1.464 | 1.496 | 1.00 |
`rg --files` in the chromium-79.0.3915.2 source tree (300k results, 12.7 files per
directory)
| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `~/rg-master --files` | 445.2 ± 5.3 | 435.6 | 453.0 | 1.04 |
| `~/rg-feature --files` | 428.9 ± 7.0 | 418.2 | 440.0 | 1.00 |
`rg --files` in the linux-5.3 source tree (65k results, 15.1
files per directory)
| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./rg-master --files` | 94.5 ± 1.9 | 89.8 | 98.5 | 1.02 |
| `./rg-feature --files` | 92.6 ± 2.7 | 88.4 | 98.7 | 1.00 |
Closes#1381
.org_archive is the default extension for Org archive files, created when
entries from an Org-mode file are archived (see
<https://orgmode.org/org.html#Moving-subtrees>). These files are still in Org
mode format, so it's worth searching them at the same time as non-archive Org
mode files.
PR #1475
Most of these updates (sans thread_local) are from crates I maintain
that have seen updates recently.
Notably, this includes a bump to `termcolor 1.1.0` which includes
support for respecting `NO_COLOR`. This commit therefore means that
ripgrep now supports `NO_COLOR`.
As an added bonus, we drop a dependency on Windows. (Although the total
amount of code compiled remains the same.)
Closes#1186
Looks like the old japaric images are bunk. We update our docker image
to be based on the new rustembedded images and configure cross to use
it.
Turns out that this wasn't due to a stale docker image, but rather, a
bug in cross: https://github.com/rust-embedded/cross/issues/357
We work around that bug by installing the master branch of cross. Sigh.
Basically, matrix.os needs to be defined for every build. We
were commenting out some of the builds in order to debug
CI in the `include` section, but we also need to comment them
out in the `build section.