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c0c35d5e41
For some reason I've done a "git grep" twice with no pattern, which is really irritating, since it just grep everything. If I actually wanted that, I could do "git grep ^" or something. So add a "usage" message if the pattern is empty. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net>
47 lines
738 B
Bash
Executable file
47 lines
738 B
Bash
Executable file
#!/bin/sh
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#
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# Copyright (c) Linus Torvalds, 2005
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#
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pattern=
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flags=()
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git_flags=()
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while : ; do
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case "$1" in
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--cached|--deleted|--others|--killed|\
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--ignored|--exclude=*|\
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--exclude-from=*|\--exclude-per-directory=*)
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git_flags=("${git_flags[@]}" "$1")
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;;
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-e)
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pattern="$2"
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shift
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;;
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-A|-B|-C|-D|-d|-f|-m)
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flags=("${flags[@]}" "$1" "$2")
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shift
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;;
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--)
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# The rest are git-ls-files paths (or flags)
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shift
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break
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;;
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-*)
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flags=("${flags[@]}" "$1")
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;;
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*)
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if [ -z "$pattern" ]; then
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pattern="$1"
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shift
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fi
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break
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;;
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esac
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shift
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done
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[ "$pattern" ] || {
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echo >&2 "usage: 'git grep <pattern> [pathspec*]'"
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exit 1
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}
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git-ls-files -z "${git_flags[@]}" "$@" |
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xargs -0 grep "${flags[@]}" -e "$pattern"
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