# perg
[](https://crates.io/crates/perg)
<https://crates.io/crates/perg>
A fast, feature-rich text search tool similar to [`grep`](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/grep.1.html), written in Rust.
perg is a modern implementation of the classic grep utility, designed for speed and ease of use. It supports regular expressions, recursive directory searching, and various output formatting options.
## Features
- **Fast text searching** with regular expression support
- **Recursive directory search** with the `-r` flag
- **Case-insensitive matching** with the `-i` flag
- **Line number display** with the `-n` flag
- **Filename display** with the `-H` flag
- **Invert match** (show non-matching lines) with the `-v` flag
- **Files with/without matches** listing with `-l`/`-L` flags
- **Count matching lines** with the `-c` flag
- **Show only matching parts** with the `-o` flag
- **Context lines** with `-B` (before), `-A` (after), and `-C` (around) flags
- **Limit matches** with the `-m` flag
- **Colorized output** with the `--color` flag
- **Multiple file/directory support**
- **Proper error handling** and exit codes
```bash
❯ perg --help
A fast, feature-rich text search tool similar to grep, written in Rust
Usage: perg [OPTIONS] <PATTERN> [PATH]...
Arguments:
<PATTERN> Pattern to search for (supports regular expressions)
[PATH]... Files or directories to search in
Options:
-i, --ignore-case
Perform case insensitive matching
-n, --line-number
Show line numbers
-H, --with-filename
Show filenames
-r, --recursive
Recursively search directories
-s, --no-messages
Suppress error messages about inaccessible files
-v, --invert-match
Invert match: show lines that do NOT match the pattern
-l, --files-with-matches
Only show filenames that contain matches
-L, --files-without-match
Only show filenames that do NOT contain matches
-c, --count
Print a count of matching lines for each input file
-B, --before-context <BEFORE_CONTEXT>
Print NUM lines of leading context before matching lines [default: 0]
-A, --after-context <AFTER_CONTEXT>
Print NUM lines of trailing context after matching lines [default: 0]
-C, --context <CONTEXT>
Print NUM lines of output context [default: 0]
-m, --max-count <MAX_COUNT>
Stop reading a file after NUM matching lines
-o, --only-matching
Print only the matched (non-empty) parts of a matching line
-h, --help
Print help
-V, --version
Print version
```
## Usage
A `test.md` file is included in this repo for testing:
```bash
$ cat test.md
hello world hi world bye world end of file Title
```
### Basic Usage
Search for a pattern in a file:
```bash
$ perg hello test.md
hello world
```
### Advanced Features
**Line numbers:**
```bash
$ perg -n world test.md
1:hello world
2:hi world
3:bye world
```
**Case insensitive search:**
```bash
$ perg -i title test.md
Title
```
**Invert match (show lines that DON'T match):**
```bash
$ perg -v world test.md
end of file
Title
```
**Recursive directory search:**
```bash
perg -r "pattern" /path/to/directory
```
**Show filenames with matches:**
```bash
$ perg -l world test.md
test.md
```
**Show filenames without matches:**
```bash
$ perg -L world test.md
# (shows files that don't contain "world")
```
**Count matching lines:**
```bash
$ perg -c world test.md
test.md:2
```
**Show only matching parts:**
```bash
$ perg -o 'h[ei]' test.md
hello
hi
```
**Context lines around matches:**
```bash
# Show 1 line before and after each match
$ perg -B 1 -A 1 'pattern' file.txt
# Show 2 lines of context around matches
$ perg -C 2 'pattern' file.txt
```
**Limit number of matches:**
```bash
$ perg -m 2 'pattern' file.txt
# Show only the first 2 matches
```
**Colorized output:**
```bash
$ perg --color=always 'pattern' file.txt
# Show matches with color highlighting
$ perg --color=never 'pattern' file.txt
# Never show colors (plain text)
$ perg --color=auto 'pattern' file.txt
# Show colors automatically based on terminal support (default)
```
**Multiple files:**
```bash
$ perg -H pattern file1.txt file2.txt
file1.txt:matching line
file2.txt:another match
```
**Regular expressions:**
```bash
$ perg "h[ei]" test.md
hello world
hi world
bye world
$ perg "^(be)" test.md
bye world
end of file
```
**Combined options:**
```bash
perg -r -i -n "error" /var/log/
```
## Installation
### From Crates.io
Using [Cargo](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/getting-started/installation.html) via `rustup`:
```bash
Then install `perg`:
```bash
cargo install perg
```
Note: If you see "cargo command not found", restart your terminal and run the install command again.
### From Source
Clone the repository and build:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/vinhnx/perg.git
cd perg
cargo build --release
./target/release/perg --help
```
## Exit Codes
- `0`: Success, matches found (or no matches when using `-L`)
- `1`: File not found or other I/O errors
- `2`: Invalid regular expression
## Project Structure
This project is organized as follows:
```
src/
├── main.rs # CLI entry point
├── lib.rs # Library exports
├── cli.rs # Command-line argument parsing
├── search.rs # Core search functionality
├── error.rs # Error types and handling
└── ...
```
## Development
This project was created as a learning exercise for Rust programming. It demonstrates:
- Modern Rust development practices
- CLI application development with clap
- Error handling patterns
- Unit and integration testing
- Documentation with rustdoc
### Running Tests
```bash
cargo test # Run all tests
cargo test --test integration_test # Run integration tests only
cargo test search::tests # Run specific test module
```
### Benchmarks
The tool is optimized for performance and can handle large files and directories efficiently.
## Contributing
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to:
- Report bugs
- Suggest features
- Submit pull requests
- Improve documentation
## License
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the [LICENSE](LICENSE) file for details.
## What's with the name?
Glad you asked, `perg` is just the reversed spelling of `grep`! 🦀
## Rust Resources 🦀
- [The Rust Programming Language Book](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/)
- [Rust by Example](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/)
- [Rustlings](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustlings) - Great for learning Rust
[Rust continues to be one of the most loved programming languages according to Stack Overflow surveys](https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2023). :gift: