I have a file in Linux, I would like to diplay lines which contain a specific string in that file, how to do this?
5 Answers
The usual way to do this is with grep, which uses a regex pattern to match lines:
grep 'pattern' file
Each line which matches the pattern will be output. If you want to search for fixed strings only, use grep -F 'pattern' file.
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addition grep -rn 'string' /path/ if you want to search a string in a folder in which file including and line number – Julius Limson Oct 25 '18 at 07:15
Besides grep, you can also use other utilities such as awk or sed
Here is a few examples. Let say you want to search for a string is in the file named GPL.
Your sample file
user@linux:~$ cat -n GPL
1 The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for
2 The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed
3 the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to
4 GNU General Public License for most of our software;
user@linux:~$
1. grep
user@linux:~$ grep is GPL
The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for
the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to
user@linux:~$
2. awk
user@linux:~$ awk /is/ GPL
The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for
the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to
user@linux:~$
3. sed
user@linux:~$ sed -n '/is/p' GPL
The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for
the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to
user@linux:~$
Hope this helps
/tmp/myfile
first line text
wanted text
other text
the command
$ grep -n "wanted text" /tmp/myfile | awk -F ":" '{print $1}'
2
The -n switch to grep prepends any matched line with the line number (followed by :), while the second command uses the colon as a column separator (-F ":") and prints out the first column of any line. The final result is the list of line numbers with a match.
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An answer should contain explanation of the given command. Besides, the OP was probably asking for the actual line, not the line number – Ilario Aug 04 '21 at 08:01
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@Ilario Alright, feel free to give your edit contribution to the answer. – deFreitas Aug 07 '21 at 16:17
The grep family of commands (incl egrep, fgrep) is the usual solution for this.
$ grep pattern filename
If you're searching source code, then ack may be a better bet. It'll search subdirectories automatically and avoid files you'd normally not search (objects, SCM directories etc.)
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Write the queue job information in long format to text file
qstat -f > queue.txt
Grep job names
grep 'Job_Name' queue.txt
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