I would like to grep for a string, but also show the preceding five lines and the following five lines as well as the matched line. How would I be able to do this?
14 Answers
For BSD or GNU grep you can use -B num to set how many lines before the match and -A num for the number of lines after the match.
grep -B 3 -A 2 foo README.txtIf you want the same number of lines before and after you can use -C num.
grep -C 3 foo README.txtThis will show 3 lines before and 3 lines after.
15-A and -B will work, as will -C n (for n lines of context), or just -n (for n lines of context... as long as n is 1 to 9).
ack works with similar arguments as grep, and accepts -C. But it's usually better for searching through code.
grep astring myfile -A 5 -B 5That will grep "myfile" for "astring", and show 5 lines before and after each match
2I normally use
grep searchstring file -C n # n for number of lines of context up and downMany of the tools like grep also have really great man files too. I find myself referring to grep's man page a lot because there is so much you can do with it.
man grepMany GNU tools also have an info page that may have more useful information in addition to the man page.
info grep ripgrep
If you care about the performance, use ripgrep which has similar syntax to grep, e.g.
rg -C5 "pattern" .
-C,--context NUM- Show NUM lines before and after each match.
There are also parameters such as -A/--after-context and -B/--before-context.
The tool is built on top of Rust's regex engine which makes it very efficient on the large data.
Use grep
$ grep --help | grep -i context
Context control: -B, --before-context=NUM print NUM lines of leading context -A, --after-context=NUM print NUM lines of trailing context -C, --context=NUM print NUM lines of output context -NUM same as --context=NUM 3 If you search code often, AG the silver searcher is much more efficient (ie faster) than grep.
You show context lines by using the -C option.
Eg:
ag -C 3 "foo" myFile
line 1
line 2
line 3
line that has "foo"
line 5
line 6
line 7 1 Search for "17655" in /some/file.txt showing 10 lines context before and after (using Awk), output preceded with line number followed by a colon. Use this on Solaris when grep does not support the -[ACB] options.
awk '
/17655/ { for (i = (b + 1) % 10; i != b; i = (i + 1) % 10) { print before[i] } print (NR ":" ($0)) a = 10
}
a-- > 0 { print (NR ":" ($0))
}
{ before[b] = (NR ":" ($0)) b = (b + 1) % 10
}' /some/file.txt; You can use option -A (after) and -B (before) in your grep command.
Try grep -nri -A 5 -B 5 .
I do it the compact way:
grep -5 string fileThat is the equivalent of:
grep -A 5 -B 5 string file Here is the @Ygor solution in awk
awk 'c-->0;$0~s{if(b)for(c=b+1;c>1;c--)print r[(NR-c+1)%b];print;c=a}b{r[NR%b]=$0}' b=3 a=3 s="pattern" myfileNote: Replace a and b variables with number of lines before and after.
It's especially useful for system which doesn't support grep's -A, -B and -C parameters.
Grep has an option called Context Line Control, you can use the --context in that, simply,
| grep -C 5or
| grep -5Should do the trick
$ grep thestring thefile -5-5 gets you 5 lines above and below the match 'thestring' is equivalent to -C 5 or -A 5 -B 5.