This commit cleans up the README and splits portions of it out into a user guide (GUIDE.md) and a FAQ (FAQ.md). The README now provides a small list of documentation "quick" links to various parts of the docs. This commit also does a few other minor touchups.
13 KiB
FAQ
- Does ripgrep support configuration files?
- What's changed in ripgrep recently?
- When is the next release?
- Does ripgrep have a man page?
- Does ripgrep have support for shell auto-completion?
- How do I use lookaround and/or backreferences?
- How do I stop ripgrep from messing up colors when I kill it?
- How can I get results in a consistent order?
- How do I search files that aren't UTF-8?
- How do I search compressed files?
- How do I search over multiple lines?
- How do I get around the regex size limit?
- How do I make the
-f/--file
flag faster? - How do I make the output look like The Silver Searcher's output?
- When I run
rg
, why does it execute some other command? - How do I create an alias for ripgrep on Windows?
- How do I create a PowerShell profile?
- How do I pipe non-ASCII content to ripgrep on Windows?
Does ripgrep support configuration files?
Yes. See the guide's section on configuration files.
What's changed in ripgrep recently?
Please consult ripgrep's CHANGELOG.
When is the next release?
ripgrep is a project whose contributors are volunteers. A release schedule adds undue stress to said volunteers. Therefore, releases are made on a best effort basis and no dates will ever be given.
One exception to this is high impact bugs. If a ripgrep release contains a significant regression, then there will generally be a strong push to get a patch release out with a fix.
Does ripgrep have a man page?
Yes! Whenever ripgrep is compiled on a system with asciidoc
present, then a
man page is generated from ripgrep's argv parser. After compiling ripgrep, you
can find the man page like so from the root of the repository:
$ find ./target -name rg.1 -print0 | xargs -0 ls -t | head -n1
./target/debug/build/ripgrep-79899d0edd4129ca/out/rg.1
Running man -l ./target/debug/build/ripgrep-79899d0edd4129ca/out/rg.1
will
show the man page in your normal pager.
Note that the man page's documentation for options is equivalent to the output
shown in rg --help
. To see more condensed documentation (one line per flag),
run rg -h
.
The man page is also included in all ripgrep binary releases.
Does ripgrep have support for shell auto-completion?
Yes! Shell completions can be found in the
same directory as the man page
after building ripgrep. Zsh completions are maintained separately and committed
to the repository in complete/_rg
.
Shell completions are also included in all ripgrep binary releases.
For bash, move rg.bash
to
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/bash_completion
or /etc/bash_completion.d/
.
For fish, move rg.fish
to $HOME/.config/fish/completions/
.
For zsh, move _rg
to one of your $fpath
directories.
For PowerShell, add . _rg.ps1
to your PowerShell
profile
(note the leading period). If the _rg.ps1
file is not on your PATH
, do
. /path/to/_rg.ps1
instead.
How can I get results in a consistent order?
By default, ripgrep uses parallelism to execute its search because this makes the search much faster on most modern systems. This in turn means that ripgrep has a non-deterministic aspect to it, since the interleaving of threads during the execution of the program is itself non-deterministic. This has the effect of printing results in a somewhat arbitrary order, and this order can change from run to run of ripgrep.
The only way to make the order of results consistent is to ask ripgrep to
sort the output. Currently, this will disable all parallelism. (On smaller
repositories, you might not notice much of a performance difference!) You
can achieve this with the --sort-files
flag.
There is more discussion on this topic here: https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep/issues/152
How do I search files that aren't UTF-8?
See the guide's section on file encoding.
How do I search compressed files?
ripgrep's -z/--search-zip
flag will cause it to search compressed files
automatically. Currently, this supports gzip, bzip2, lzma and xz only and
requires the corresponding gzip
, bzip2
and xz
binaries to be installed on
your system. (That is, ripgrep does decompression by shelling out to another
process.)
ripgrep currently does not search archive formats, so *.tar.gz
files, for
example, are skipped.
How do I search over multiple lines?
This isn't currently possible. ripgrep is fundamentally a line-oriented search tool. With that said, multiline search is a planned opt-in feature.
How do I use lookaround and/or backreferences?
This isn't currently possible. ripgrep uses finite automata to implement regular expression search, and in turn, guarantees linear time searching on all inputs. It is difficult to efficiently support lookaround and backreferences in finite automata engines, so ripgrep does not provide these features.
If a production quality regular expression engine with these features is ever written in Rust, then it is possible ripgrep will provide it as an opt-in feature.
How do I stop ripgrep from messing up colors when I kill it?
Type in color
in cmd.exe (Command Prompt) and echo -ne "\033[0m"
on
Unix-like systems to restore your original foreground color.
In PowerShell, you can add the following code to your profile which will
restore the original foreground color when Reset-ForegroundColor
is called.
Including the Set-Alias
line will allow you to call it with simply color
.
$OrigFgColor = $Host.UI.RawUI.ForegroundColor
function Reset-ForegroundColor {
$Host.UI.RawUI.ForegroundColor = $OrigFgColor
}
Set-Alias -Name color -Value Reset-ForegroundColor
PR #187 fixed this, and it was later deprecated in #281. A full explanation is available here.
How do I get around the regex size limit?
If you've given ripgrep a particularly large pattern (or a large number of smaller patterns), then it is possible that it will fail to compile because it hit a pre-set limit. For example:
$ rg '\pL{1000}'
Compiled regex exceeds size limit of 10485760 bytes.
(Note: \pL{1000}
may look small, but \pL
is the character class containing
all Unicode letters, which is quite large. And it's repeated 1000 times.)
In this case, you can work around by simply increasing the limit:
$ rg '\pL{1000}' --regex-size-limit 1G
Increasing the limit to 1GB does not necessarily mean that ripgrep will use that much memory. The limit just says that it's allowed to (approximately) use that much memory for constructing the regular expression.
How do I make the -f/--file
flag faster?
The -f/--file
permits one to give a file to ripgrep which contains a pattern
on each line. ripgrep will then report any line that matches any of the
patterns.
If this pattern file gets too big, then it is possible ripgrep will slow down
dramatically. Typically this is because an internal cache is too small, and
will cause ripgrep to spill over to a slower but more robust regular expression
engine. If this is indeed the problem, then it is possible to increase this
cache and regain speed. The cache can be controlled via the --dfa-size-limit
flag. For example, using --dfa-size-limit 1G
will set the cache size to 1GB.
(Note that this doesn't mean ripgrep will use 1GB of memory automatically, but
it will allow the regex engine to if it needs to.)
How do I make the output look like The Silver Searcher's output?
Use the --colors
flag, like so:
rg --colors line:fg:yellow \
--colors line:style:bold \
--colors path:fg:green \
--colors path:style:bold \
--colors match:fg:black \
--colors match:bg:yellow \
--colors match:style:nobold \
foo
Alternatively, add your color configuration to your ripgrep config file (which
is activated by setting the RIPGREP_CONFIG_PATH
environment variable to point
to your config file). For example:
$ cat $HOME/.config/ripgrep/rc
--colors=line:fg:yellow
--colors=line:style:bold
--colors=path:fg:green
--colors=path:style:bold
--colors=match:fg:black
--colors=match:bg:yellow
--colors=match:style:nobold
$ RIPGREP_CONFIG_PATH=$HOME/.config/ripgrep/rc rg foo
When I run rg
, why does it execute some other command?
It's likely that you have a shell alias or even another tool called rg
which
is interfering with ripgrep. Run which rg
to see what it is.
(Notably, the Rails plug-in for
Oh My Zsh sets
up an rg
alias for rails generate
.)
Problems like this can be resolved in one of several ways:
- If you're using the OMZ Rails plug-in, disable it by editing the
plugins
array in your zsh configuration. - Temporarily bypass an existing
rg
alias by calling ripgrep ascommand rg
,\rg
, or'rg'
. - Temporarily bypass an existing alias or another tool named
rg
by calling ripgrep by its full path (e.g.,/usr/bin/rg
or/usr/local/bin/rg
). - Permanently disable an existing
rg
alias by addingunalias rg
to the bottom of your shell configuration file (e.g.,.bash_profile
or.zshrc
). - Give ripgrep its own alias that doesn't conflict with other tools/aliases by
adding a line like the following to the bottom of your shell configuration
file:
alias ripgrep='command rg'
.
How do I create an alias for ripgrep on Windows?
Often you can find a need to make alias for commands you use a lot that set
certain flags. But PowerShell function aliases do not behave like your typical
linux shell alias. You always need to propagate arguments and stdin
input.
But it cannot be done simply as
function grep() { $input | rg.exe --hidden $args }
Use below example as reference to how setup alias in PowerShell.
function grep {
$count = @($input).Count
$input.Reset()
if ($count) {
$input | rg.exe --hidden $args
}
else {
rg.exe --hidden $args
}
}
PowerShell special variables:
- input - is powershell
stdin
object that allows you to access its content. - args - is array of arguments passed to this function.
This alias checks whether there is stdin
input and propagates only if there
is some lines. Otherwise empty $input
will make powershell to trigger rg
to
search empty stdin
.
How do I create a PowerShell profile?
To customize powershell on start-up, there is a special PowerShell script that
has to be created. In order to find its location, type $profile
.
See
Microsoft's documentation
for more details.
Any PowerShell code in this file gets evaluated at the start of console. This way you can have own aliases to be created at start.
How do I pipe non-ASCII content to ripgrep on Windows?
When piping input into native executables in PowerShell, the encoding of the
input is controlled by the $OutputEncoding
variable. By default, this is set
to US-ASCII, and any characters in the pipeline that don't have encodings in
US-ASCII are converted to ?
(question mark) characters.
To change this setting, set $OutputEncoding
to a different encoding, as
represented by a .NET encoding object. Some common examples are below. The
value of this variable is reset when PowerShell restarts, so to make this
change take effect every time PowerShell is started add a line setting the
variable into your PowerShell profile.
Example $OutputEncoding
settings:
- UTF-8 without BOM:
$OutputEncoding = [System.Text.UTF8Encoding]::new()
- The console's output encoding:
$OutputEncoding = [System.Console]::OutputEncoding
If you continue to have encoding problems, you can also force the encoding
that the console will use for printing to UTF-8 with
[System.Console]::OutputEncoding = [System.Text.Encoding]::UTF8
. This
will also reset when PowerShell is restarted, so you can add that line
to your profile as well if you want to make the setting permanent.