Expand description
This crate provides an implementation of line oriented search, with optional support for multi-line search.
§Brief overview
The principle type in this crate is a Searcher, which can be configured
and built by a SearcherBuilder. A Searcher is responsible for reading
bytes from a source (e.g., a file), executing a search of those bytes using
a Matcher (e.g., a regex) and then reporting the results of that search to
a Sink (e.g., stdout). The Searcher itself is principally responsible
for managing the consumption of bytes from a source and applying a Matcher
over those bytes in an efficient way. The Searcher is also responsible for
inverting a search, counting lines, reporting contextual lines, detecting
binary data and even deciding whether or not to use memory maps.
A Matcher (which is defined in the
grep-matcher crate) is a trait
for describing the lowest levels of pattern search in a generic way. The
interface itself is very similar to the interface of a regular expression.
For example, the grep-regex
crate provides an implementation of the Matcher trait using Rust’s
regex crate.
Finally, a Sink describes how callers receive search results producer by a
Searcher. This includes routines that are called at the beginning and end of
a search, in addition to routines that are called when matching or contextual
lines are found by the Searcher. Implementations of Sink can be trivially
simple, or extraordinarily complex, such as the Standard printer found in
the grep-printer crate, which
effectively implements grep-like output. This crate also provides convenience
Sink implementations in the sinks sub-module for easy searching with
closures.
§Example
This example shows how to execute the searcher and read the search results
using the UTF8 implementation of Sink.
use {
grep_matcher::Matcher,
grep_regex::RegexMatcher,
grep_searcher::Searcher,
grep_searcher::sinks::UTF8,
};
const SHERLOCK: &'static [u8] = b"\
For the Doctor Watsons of this world, as opposed to the Sherlock
Holmeses, success in the province of detective work must always
be, to a very large extent, the result of luck. Sherlock Holmes
can extract a clew from a wisp of straw or a flake of cigar ash;
but Doctor Watson has to have it taken out for him and dusted,
and exhibited clearly, with a label attached.
";
let matcher = RegexMatcher::new(r"Doctor \w+")?;
let mut matches: Vec<(u64, String)> = vec![];
Searcher::new().search_slice(&matcher, SHERLOCK, UTF8(|lnum, line| {
// We are guaranteed to find a match, so the unwrap is OK.
let mymatch = matcher.find(line.as_bytes())?.unwrap();
matches.push((lnum, line[mymatch].to_string()));
Ok(true)
}))?;
assert_eq!(matches.len(), 2);
assert_eq!(
matches[0],
(1, "Doctor Watsons".to_string())
);
assert_eq!(
matches[1],
(5, "Doctor Watson".to_string())
);
See also examples/search-stdin.rs from the root of this crate’s directory
to see a similar example that accepts a pattern on the command line and
searches stdin.
Modules§
- sinks
- A collection of convenience implementations of
Sink.
Structs§
- Binary
Detection - The behavior of binary detection while searching.
- Encoding
- An encoding to use when searching.
- Line
Iter - An iterator over lines in a particular slice of bytes.
- Line
Step - An explicit iterator over lines in a particular slice of bytes.
- Mmap
Choice - Controls the strategy used for determining when to use memory maps.
- Searcher
- A searcher executes searches over a haystack and writes results to a caller provided sink.
- Searcher
Builder - A builder for configuring a searcher.
- Sink
Context - A type that describes a contextual line reported by a searcher.
- Sink
Finish - Summary data reported at the end of a search.
- Sink
Match - A type that describes a match reported by a searcher.
Enums§
- Config
Error - An error that can occur when building a searcher.
- Sink
Context Kind - The type of context reported by a searcher.