Grepping in XML and other structured files

From WTFwiki
Revision as of 11:39, 17 November 2008 by Stian (talk | contribs) (A new page, with stuff in it)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Sometimes you need to grep in a HTML file or an XML file or other kinds of files which are not line-based. This is usually hard or painful using your standard grepping tools. Luckily there's a wonderful tool called sgrep which does exactly this sort of thing. You'll find it in apt if you're using Ubuntu and probably ports if you are using a BSD and if not, you're being really difficult but its homepage might be [1].

Here's an example to show how you might yank all the virtualhost directives out of a httpd.conf:

grep -v ^# httpd.conf | sgrep -i '"<virtualhost".."</virtualhost>"'

Yay!

Also here's a small tip for dealing with ugly XML files: Expat comes with a tool called xmllint which is able to reformat files thus:

xmllint --format - <uglymess.xml

That'll be $5.