The --max-filesize option allows filtering files which are larger than
the specified limit. This is potentially useful if one is attempting to
search a number of large files without common file-types/suffixes.
See #369.
When give an explicit file path on the command line like `foo` where `foo`
is a symlink, ripgrep should follow it even if `-L` isn't set. This is
consistent with the behavior of `foo/`.
Fixes#256
When ripgrep detects a literal, it emits them as raw hex escaped byte
sequences to Regex::new. This permits literal optimizations for arbitrary
byte sequences (i.e., possibly invalid UTF-8). The problem is that
Regex::new interprets hex escaped byte sequences as *Unicode codepoints*
by default, but we want them to actually stand for their raw byte values.
Therefore, disable Unicode mode.
This is OK, since the regex is composed entirely of literals and literal
extraction does Unicode case folding.
Fixes#251
This changes the uppercase literal detection for the "smart case"
functionality. In particular, a character class is considered to have an
uppercase literal if at least one of its ranges starts or stops with an
uppercase literal.
Fixes#229
There were two important reasons for the switch:
1. Performance. Docopt does poorly when the argv becomes large, which is
a reasonable common use case for search tools. (e.g., use with xargs)
2. Better failure modes. Clap knows a lot more about how a particular
argv might be invalid, and can therefore provide much clearer error
messages.
While both were important, (1) made it urgent.
Note that since Clap requires at least Rust 1.11, this will in turn
increase the minimum Rust version supported by ripgrep from Rust 1.9 to
Rust 1.11. It is therefore a breaking change, so the soonest release of
ripgrep with Clap will have to be 0.3.
There is also at least one subtle breaking change in real usage.
Previous to this commit, this used to work:
rg -e -foo
Where this would cause ripgrep to search for the string `-foo`. Clap
currently has problems supporting this use case
(see: https://github.com/kbknapp/clap-rs/issues/742),
but it can be worked around by using this instead:
rg -e [-]foo
or even
rg [-]foo
and this still works:
rg -- -foo
This commit also adds Bash, Fish and PowerShell completion files to the
release, fixes a bug that prevented ripgrep from working on file
paths containing invalid UTF-8 and shows short descriptions in the
output of `-h` but longer descriptions in the output of `--help`.
Fixes#136, Fixes#189, Fixes#210, Fixes#230
This is a somewhat basic implementation of `-f-` (#7), with unit tests.
Changes include:
1. The internals of the `pattern` function have been refactored to avoid
code duplication, but there's a lot more we could do. Right now we
read the entire pattern list into a `Vec`.
2. There's now a `WorkDir::pipe` command that allows sending standard
input to `rg` when testing.
Not implemented: aho-corasick.
Namely, passing a directory to --ignore-file caused ripgrep to allocate
memory without bound.
The issue was that I got a bit overzealous with partial error
reporting. Namely, when processing a gitignore file, we should try
to use every pattern even if some patterns are invalid globs (e.g.,
a**b). In the process, I applied the same logic to I/O errors. In this
case, it manifest by attempting to read lines from a directory, which
appears to yield Results forever, where each Result is an error of the
form "you can't read from a directory silly." Since I treated it as a
partial error, ripgrep was just spinning and accruing each error in
memory, which caused the OOM killer to kick in.
Fixes#228
This was a subtle bug, but the big picture was that the smart case
information wasn't being carried through to the literal extraction in
some cases. When this happened, it was possible to get back an incomplete
set of literals, which would therefore miss some valid matches.
The fix to this is to actually parse the regex and determine whether
smart case applies before doing anything else. It's a little extra work,
but parsing is pretty fast.
Fixes#199
This was probably a transcription error when moving the ignore matcher
code out of ripgrep core. Specifically, the override glob matcher should
not ignore directories if they don't match.
Fixes#206
This PR introduces a new sub-crate, `ignore`, which primarily provides a
fast recursive directory iterator that respects ignore files like
gitignore and other configurable filtering rules based on globs or even
file types.
This results in a substantial source of complexity moved out of ripgrep's
core and into a reusable component that others can now (hopefully)
benefit from.
While much of the ignore code carried over from ripgrep's core, a
substantial portion of it was rewritten with the following goals in
mind:
1. Reuse matchers built from gitignore files across directory iteration.
2. Design the matcher data structure to be amenable for parallelizing
directory iteration. (Indeed, writing the parallel iterator is the
next step.)
Fixes#9, #44, #45
This particular bug was triggered whenever a search was run in a directory
with a parent directory that contains a relevant .gitignore file. In
particular, before matching against a parent directory's gitignore rules,
a path's leading `./` was not stripped, which results in errant matching.
We now make sure `./` is stripped.
Fixes#184.
The bug fix was in expression pretty printing. ripgrep parses the regex
into an AST and may do some modifications to it, which requires the
ability to go from string -> AST -> string' -> AST' where string == string'
implies AST == AST'.
Also, add a regression test for the specific regex that tripped the bug.
Fixes#156.
This commit completes the initial move of glob matching to an external
crate, including fixing up cross platform support, polishing the
external crate for others to use and fixing a number of bugs in the
process.
Fixes#87, #127, #131
This commit goes a long way toward refactoring glob sets so that the
code is easier to maintain going forward. In particular, it makes the
literal optimizations that glob sets used a lot more structured and much
easier to extend. Tests have also been modified to include glob sets.
There's still a bit of polish work left to do before a release.
This also fixes the immediate issue where large gitignore files were
causing ripgrep to slow way down. While we don't technically fix it for
good, we're a lot better about reducing the number of regexes we
compile. In particular, if a gitignore file contains thousands of
patterns that can't be matched more simply using literals, then ripgrep
will slow down again. We could fix this for good by avoiding RegexSet if
the number of regexes grows too large.
Fixes#134.
This was a result of misinterpreting a feature in grep where NUL bytes
are replaced with \n. The primary reason for doing this is to avoid
excessive memory usage on truly binary data. However, grep only does this
when searching binary files as if they were binary, and which only reports
whether the file matched or not. When grep is told to search binary data
as text (the -a/--text flag), then it doesn't do any replacement so we
shouldn't either.
In general, this makes sense, because the user is essentially asserting
that a particular file that looks like binary is actually text. In that
case, we shouldn't try to replace any NUL bytes.
ripgrep doesn't actually support searching binary data for whether it
matches or not, so we don't actually need the replace_buf function.
However, it does seem like a potentially useful feature.
If we do, this results in extracting `foofoofoo` from `(\wfoo){3}`,
which is wrong. This does prevent us from extracting `foofoofoo` from
`foo{3}`, which is unfortunate, but we miss plenty of other stuff too.
Literal extracting needs a good rethink (all the way down into the regex
engine).
Fixes#93
Closes#26.
Acts like --count but emits only the paths of files with matches,
suitable for piping to xargs. Both mmap and no-mmap searches terminate
after the first match is found. Documentation updated and tests added.
A standard glob of `foo/**` will match `foo`, but gitignore semantics
specify that `foo/**` should only match the contents of `foo` and not
`foo` itself. We capture those semantics by translating `foo/**` to
`foo/**/*`.
Fixes#30.