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| #!/bin/sh | |
| # xzgrep -- a wrapper around a grep program that decompresses files as needed | |
| # Adapted from a version sent by Charles Levert <[email protected]> | |
| # Copyright (C) 1998, 2001, 2002, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation | |
| # Copyright (C) 1993 Jean-loup Gailly | |
| # Modified for XZ Utils by Andrew Dudman and Lasse Collin. | |
| # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | |
| # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
| # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or | |
| # (at your option) any later version. | |
| # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | |
| # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
| # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
| # GNU General Public License for more details. | |
| #SET_PATH - This line is a placeholder to ease patching this script. | |
| # Instead of unsetting XZ_OPT, just make sure that xz will use file format | |
| # autodetection. This way memory usage limit and thread limit can be | |
| # specified via XZ_OPT. With gzip, bzip2, and lzop it's OK to just unset the | |
| # environment variables. | |
| xz='xz --format=auto' | |
| unset GZIP BZIP BZIP2 LZOP | |
| case ${0##*/} in | |
| *egrep*) prog=xzegrep; grep=${GREP:-grep -E};; | |
| *fgrep*) prog=xzfgrep; grep=${GREP:-grep -F};; | |
| *) prog=xzgrep; grep=${GREP:-grep};; | |
| esac | |
| version="$prog (XZ Utils) 5.2.10" | |
| usage="Usage: ${0##*/} [OPTION]... [-e] PATTERN [FILE]... | |
| Look for instances of PATTERN in the input FILEs, using their | |
| uncompressed contents if they are compressed. | |
| OPTIONs are the same as for '$grep'. | |
| Report bugs to <[email protected]>." | |
| # sed script to escape all ' for the shell, and then (to handle trailing | |
| # newlines correctly) turn trailing X on last line into '. | |
| escape=' | |
| s/'\''/'\''\\'\'''\''/g | |
| $s/X$/'\''/ | |
| ' | |
| operands= | |
| have_pat=0 | |
| files_with_matches=0 | |
| files_without_matches=0 | |
| no_filename=0 | |
| with_filename=0 | |
| # See if -H and --label options are supported (GNU and *BSDs). | |
| if test f:x = "$(eval "echo x | $grep -H --label=f x 2> /dev/null")"; then | |
| grep_supports_label=1 | |
| else | |
| grep_supports_label=0 | |
| fi | |
| while test $# -ne 0; do | |
| option=$1 | |
| shift | |
| optarg= | |
| case $option in | |
| (-[0123456789abcdEFGhHiIKlLnoPqrRsTuUvVwxyzZ]*[!0123456789]*) | |
| # Something like -Fiv was specified, that is, $option contains more | |
| # than one option of which the first option (in this example -F) | |
| # doesn't take an argument. Split the first option into a standalone | |
| # argument and continue parsing the rest of the options (in this example, | |
| # replace -Fiv with -iv in the argument list and set option=-F). | |
| # | |
| # If there are digits [0-9] they are treated as if they were a single | |
| # option character because this syntax is an alias for -C for GNU grep. | |
| # For example, "grep -25F" is equivalent to "grep -C25 -F". If only | |
| # digits are specified like "grep -25" we don't get here because the | |
| # above pattern in the case-statement doesn't match such strings. | |
| arg2=-\'$(LC_ALL=C expr "X${option}X" : 'X-.[0-9]*\(.*\)' | | |
| LC_ALL=C sed "$escape") | |
| eval "set -- $arg2 "'${1+"$@"}' | |
| option=$(LC_ALL=C expr "X$option" : 'X\(-.[0-9]*\)');; | |
| (--binary-*=* | --[lm]a*=* | --reg*=*) | |
| # These options require an argument and an argument has been provided | |
| # with the --foo=argument syntax. All is good. | |
| ;; | |
| (-[ABCDefmX] | --binary-* | --file | --[lm]a* | --reg*) | |
| # These options require an argument which should now be in $1. | |
| # If it isn't, display an error and exit. | |
| case ${1?"$option option requires an argument"} in | |
| (*\'*) | |
| optarg=" '"$(printf '%sX\n' "$1" | LC_ALL=C sed "$escape");; | |
| (*) | |
| optarg=" '$1'";; | |
| esac | |
| shift;; | |
| (--) | |
| break;; | |
| (-?*) | |
| ;; | |
| (*) | |
| case $option in | |
| (*\'*) | |
| operands="$operands '"$(printf '%sX\n' "$option" | | |
| LC_ALL=C sed "$escape");; | |
| (*) | |
| operands="$operands '$option'";; | |
| esac | |
| ${POSIXLY_CORRECT+break} | |
| continue;; | |
| esac | |
| case $option in | |
| (-[drRzZ] | --di* | --exc* | --inc* | --rec* | --nu*) | |
| printf >&2 '%s: %s: Option not supported\n' "$0" "$option" | |
| exit 2;; | |
| (-[ef]* | --file | --file=* | --reg*) | |
| have_pat=1;; | |
| (--h | --he | --hel | --help) | |
| printf '%s\n' "$usage" || exit 2 | |
| exit;; | |
| (-H | --wi | --wit | --with | --with- | --with-f | --with-fi \ | |
| | --with-fil | --with-file | --with-filen | --with-filena | --with-filenam \ | |
| | --with-filename) | |
| with_filename=1 | |
| continue;; | |
| (-l | --files-with-*) | |
| files_with_matches=1 | |
| continue;; | |
| (-L | --files-witho*) | |
| files_without_matches=1 | |
| continue;; | |
| (-h | --no-f*) | |
| no_filename=1;; | |
| (-V | --v | --ve | --ver | --vers | --versi | --versio | --version) | |
| printf '%s\n' "$version" || exit 2 | |
| exit;; | |
| esac | |
| case $option in | |
| (*\'?*) | |
| option=\'$(printf '%sX\n' "$option" | LC_ALL=C sed "$escape");; | |
| (*) | |
| option="'$option'";; | |
| esac | |
| grep="$grep $option$optarg" | |
| done | |
| eval "set -- $operands "'${1+"$@"}' | |
| if test $have_pat -eq 0; then | |
| case ${1?"Missing pattern; try \`${0##*/} --help' for help"} in | |
| (*\'*) | |
| grep="$grep -e '"$(printf '%sX\n' "$1" | LC_ALL=C sed "$escape");; | |
| (*) | |
| grep="$grep -e '$1'";; | |
| esac | |
| shift | |
| fi | |
| if test $# -eq 0; then | |
| set -- - | |
| fi | |
| exec 3>&1 | |
| # res=1 means that no file matched yet | |
| res=1 | |
| for i; do | |
| case $i in | |
| *[-.][zZ] | *_z | *[-.]gz | *.t[ag]z) uncompress="gzip -cdf";; | |
| *[-.]bz2 | *[-.]tbz | *.tbz2) uncompress="bzip2 -cdf";; | |
| *[-.]lzo | *[-.]tzo) uncompress="lzop -cdf";; | |
| *[-.]zst | *[-.]tzst) uncompress="zstd -cdfq";; # zstd needs -q. | |
| *) uncompress="$xz -cdfqQ";; # -qQ to ignore warnings like unsupp. check. | |
| esac | |
| # xz_status will hold the decompressor's exit status. | |
| # Exit status of grep (and in rare cases, printf or sed) is | |
| # available as the exit status of this assignment command. | |
| xz_status=$( | |
| exec 5>&1 | |
| ($uncompress -- "$i" 5>&-; echo $? >&5) 3>&- | | |
| if test $files_with_matches -eq 1; then | |
| eval "$grep -q" && { printf '%s\n' "$i" || exit 2; } | |
| elif test $files_without_matches -eq 1; then | |
| eval "$grep -q" || { | |
| r=$? | |
| if test $r -eq 1; then | |
| printf '%s\n' "$i" || r=2 | |
| fi | |
| exit $r | |
| } | |
| elif test $with_filename -eq 0 && | |
| { test $# -eq 1 || test $no_filename -eq 1; }; then | |
| eval "$grep" | |
| elif test $grep_supports_label -eq 1; then | |
| # The grep implementation in use allows us to specify the filename | |
| # that grep will prefix to the output lines. This is faster and | |
| # less prone to security bugs than the fallback method that uses sed. | |
| # This also avoids confusing output with GNU grep >= 3.5 (2020-09-27) | |
| # which prints "binary file matches" to stderr instead of stdout. | |
| # | |
| # If reading from stdin, let grep use whatever name it prefers for | |
| # stdin. With GNU grep it is a locale-specific translated string. | |
| if test "x$i" = "x-"; then | |
| eval "$grep -H" | |
| else | |
| eval "$grep -H --label \"\$i\"" | |
| fi | |
| else | |
| # Append a colon so that the last character will never be a newline | |
| # which would otherwise get lost in shell command substitution. | |
| i="$i:" | |
| # Escape & \ | and newlines only if such characters are present | |
| # (speed optimization). | |
| case $i in | |
| (*' | |
| '* | *'&'* | *'\'* | *'|'*) | |
| # If sed fails, set i to a known safe string to ensure that | |
| # failing sed did not create a half-escaped dangerous string. | |
| i=$(printf '%s\n' "$i" | LC_ALL=C sed 's/[&\|]/\\&/g; $!s/$/\\/') || | |
| i='(unknown filename):';; | |
| esac | |
| # $i already ends with a colon so do not add it here. | |
| sed_script="s|^|$i|" | |
| # If grep or sed fails, pick the larger value of the two exit statuses. | |
| # If sed fails, use at least 2 since we use >= 2 to indicate errors. | |
| r=$( | |
| exec 4>&1 | |
| (eval "$grep" 4>&-; echo $? >&4) 3>&- | | |
| LC_ALL=C sed "$sed_script" >&3 4>&- | |
| ) || { | |
| sed_status=$? | |
| test "$sed_status" -lt 2 && sed_status=2 | |
| test "$r" -lt "$sed_status" && r=$sed_status | |
| } | |
| exit $r | |
| fi >&3 5>&- | |
| ) | |
| r=$? | |
| # If grep or sed or other non-decompression command failed with a signal, | |
| # exit immediately and ignore the possible remaining files. | |
| # | |
| # NOTE: Instead of 128 + signal_number, some shells use | |
| # 256 + signal_number (ksh) or 384 + signal_number (yash). | |
| # This is fine for us since their "exit" and "kill -l" commands take | |
| # this into account. (At least the versions I tried do but there is | |
| # a report of an old ksh variant whose "exit" truncates the exit status | |
| # to 8 bits without any special handling for values indicating a signal.) | |
| test "$r" -ge 128 && exit "$r" | |
| if test -z "$xz_status"; then | |
| # Something unusual happened, for example, we got a signal and | |
| # the exit status of the decompressor was never echoed and thus | |
| # $xz_status is empty. Exit immediately and ignore the possible | |
| # remaining files. | |
| exit 2 | |
| elif test "$xz_status" -ge 128; then | |
| # The decompressor died due to a signal. SIGPIPE is ignored since it can | |
| # occur if grep exits before the whole file has been decompressed (grep -q | |
| # can do that). If the decompressor died with some other signal, exit | |
| # immediately and ignore the possible remaining files. | |
| test "$(kill -l "$xz_status" 2> /dev/null)" != "PIPE" && exit "$xz_status" | |
| elif test "$xz_status" -gt 0; then | |
| # Decompression failed but we will continue with the remaining | |
| # files anwyway. Set exit status to at least 2 to indicate an error. | |
| test "$r" -lt 2 && r=2 | |
| fi | |
| # Since res=1 is the initial value, we only need to care about | |
| # matches (r == 0) and errors (r >= 2) here; r == 1 can be ignored. | |
| if test "$r" -ge 2; then | |
| # An error occurred in decompressor, grep, or some other command. Update | |
| # res unless a larger error code has been seen with an earlier file. | |
| test "$res" -lt "$r" && res=$r | |
| elif test "$r" -eq 0; then | |
| # grep found a match and no errors occurred. Update res if no errors have | |
| # occurred with earlier files. | |
| test "$res" -eq 1 && res=0 | |
| fi | |
| done | |
| # 0: At least one file matched and no errors occurred. | |
| # 1: No matches were found and no errors occurred. | |
| # >=2: Error. It's unknown if matches were found. | |
| exit "$res" | |