AG(1) AG(1) NAME ag - The Silver Searcher. Like ack, but faster. SYNOPSIS ag [options] pattern [path ...] DESCRIPTION Recursively search for PATTERN in PATH. Like grep or ack, but faster. OPTIONS --ackmate Output results in a format parseable by AckMate https://github.com/protocool/AckMate. --[no]affinity Set thread affinity (if platform supports it). Default is true. --agrc=FILE Use FILE instead of $AGRC or $HOME/.agrc for default options. Specify --no-agrc to disable reading from an agrc file. See AGRC for details. -a --all-types Search all files. This doesn't include hidden files, and doesn't respect any ignore files. -A --after[=LINES] Print lines after match. If not provided, LINES defaults to 2. -B --before[=LINES] Print lines before match. If not provided, LINES defaults to 2. --[no]break Print a newline between matches in different files. Enabled by default. -c --count Only print the number of matches in each file. Note: This is the number of matches, not the number of matching lines. Pipe output to wc -l if you want the number of matching lines. --[no]color Print color codes in results. Enabled by default. --color-line-number Color codes for line numbers. Default is 1;33. --color-match Color codes for result match numbers. Default is 30;43. --color-path Color codes for path names. Default is 1;32. --column Print column numbers in results. -C --context[=LINES] Print lines before and after matches. If not provided, LINES defaults to 2. -D --debug Output ridiculous amounts of debugging info. Not useful unless you're actually debugging. --depth=NUM Search up to NUM directories deep, -1 for unlimited. Default is 25. -E --extension=EXT Search files with this extension. Equivalent to -j -G '\.EXT$' (EXT could be a regex fragment). --[no]filename Print file names. Enabled by default, except when searching a single file. -f --[no]follow Follow symlinks. Default is false. -F --fixed-strings Alias for --literal for compatibility with grep. --[no]group The default, --group, lumps multiple matches in the same file together, and presents them under a single occurrence of the filename. --nogroup refrains from this, and instead places the filename at the start of each match line. -g --filename-pattern=PATTERN Print filenames matching PATTERN. -G --file-search-regex=PATTERN Only search files whose names match PATTERN. -H --[no]heading Print filenames above matching contents. --help-types Alias for --list-file-types for compatibility with ack. --hidden Search hidden files. This option obeys ignored files. -I --ignore=PATTERN Ignore files/directories whose names match PATTERN. Literal file and directory names are also allowed. --ignore-dir=PATTERN Alias for --ignore for compatibility with ack. -i --ignore-case Match case-insensitively. -j --just-filename Search only the file name, not the full path, when using a file search regex (such as with -g or -G). -l --files-with-matches Only print the names of files containing matches, not the matching lines. An empty query will print all files that would be searched. -L --files-without-matches Only print the names of files that don't contain matches. --list-file-types See FILE TYPES below. -m --max-count=NUM Skip the rest of a file after NUM matches. Default is 0, which never skips. --[no]mmap Toggle use of memory-mapped I/O. Defaults to true on platforms where mmap() is faster than read(). (All but macOS.) --[no]multiline Match regexes across newlines. Enabled by default. -n --norecurse Don't recurse into directories. --[no]numbers Print line numbers. Default is to omit line numbers when searching streams or a single file. -o --only-matching Print only the matching part of the lines. --one-device When recursing directories, don't scan dirs that reside on other storage devices. This lets you avoid scanning slow network mounts. This feature is not supported on all platforms. -p --path-to-ignore=PATH Provide PATH pointing to a specific .ignore file. -P --pager=COMMAND Use a pager such as less. Use --nopager to override. This option is also ignored if output is piped to another program. The pager selected is selected from (in order): the command line argument, the PAGER environment variable, the command "less" --parallel Parse the input stream as a search term, not data to search. This is meant to be used with tools such as GNU parallel. For example: echo "foo\nbar\nbaz" | parallel "ag {} ." will run 3 instances of ag, searching the current directory for "foo", "bar", and "baz". --print-long-lines Print matches on very long lines (> 2k characters by default). --passthrough --passthru When searching a stream, print all lines even if they don't match. -Q --literal Do not parse PATTERN as a regular expression. Try to match it literally. -q --silent Suppress all log messages, including errors. -r --recurse Recurse into directories when searching. Default is true. -s --case-sensitive Match case-sensitively. -S --smart-case Match case-sensitively if there are any uppercase letters in PATTERN, case-insensitively otherwise. Enabled by default. --search-binary Search binary files for matches. --stats Print stats (files scanned, time taken, etc). --stats-only Print stats (files scanned, time taken, etc) and nothing else. -t --all-text Search all text files. This doesn't include hidden files. -u --unrestricted Search all files. This ignores .ignore, .gitignore, etc. It searches binary and hidden files as well. -U --skip-vcs-ignores Ignore VCS ignore files (.gitignore, .hgignore), but still use .ignore. -v --invert-match Match every line not containing the specified pattern. -V --version Print version info. --vimgrep Output results in the same form as Vim's :vimgrep /pattern/g Here is a ~/.vimrc configuration example: set grepprg=ag\ --vimgrep\ $* set grepformat=%f:%l:%c:%m Then use :grep to grep for something. Then use :copen, :cn, :cp, etc. to navigate through the matches. -w --word-regexp Only match whole words. --workers=NUM Use NUM worker threads. Default is the number of CPU cores, with a max of 8. -W --width=NUM Truncate match lines after NUM characters. -X --invert-file-search-regex=PATTERN Like -G, but only search files whose names do not match PATTERN. File-type searches are still used and not inverted. -z --search-zip Search contents of compressed files. Currently, gz and xz are supported. This option requires that ag is built with lzma and zlib. -Z --null-lines Use NULL (\0) as the newline separator instead of \n. This is primarily useful for searching special files such as /proc/pid/environ. It applies globally to all files searched, and \n is NOT treated as a newline. This means that if a normal text file (that contains no null bytes) contains a match, the entire file will be printed as though it were a single line. This setting does not affect how newlines in regex patterns are handled (i.e. it doesn't change PCRE matching). -0 --null --print0 Separate the filenames with \0, rather than \n: this allows xargs -0 to correctly process filenames containing spaces or newlines. FILE TYPES It is possible to restrict the types of files searched. For example, passing --html will search only files with the extensions htm, html, shtml or xhtml. For a list of supported types, run ag --list-file-types. IGNORING FILES By default, ag will ignore files whose names match patterns in .gitignore, .hgignore, or .ignore. These files can be anywhere in the directories being searched. Binary files are ignored by default as well. Finally, ag looks in $HOME/.agignore for ignore patterns. If you want to ignore .gitignore and .hgignore, but still take .ignore into account, use -U. Use the -t option to search all text files; -a to search all files; and -u to search all, including hidden files. AGRC To modify the "default" options, ag can read a list of command-line arguments from an "agrc" file. One "agrc" file will be selected as the first of 1) the PATH in --agrc=PATH, 2) the environment variable AGRC, or 3) the default $HOME/.agrc. If --noagrc is specified, an "agrc" file will not be used. The "agrc" file should contain a list of command-line arguments, one per line. You don't need to quote arguments as you would in a shell as the entire line will be considered a single argument. For long options which take a value, use the form --option=value rather than --option value. EXAMPLES ag printf: Find matches for "printf" in the current directory. ag foo /bar/: Find matches for "foo" in path /bar/. ag -- --foo: Find matches for "--foo" in the current directory. (As with most UNIX command line utilities, "--" is used to signify that the remaining arguments should not be treated as options.) ABOUT ag was originally created by Geoff Greer. More information (and the latest release) can be found at http://geoff.greer.fm/ag This man page is part of Allen Wild's fork of ag, which uses version 2 of the PCRE library and other additional features: https://github.com/aswild/the_silver_searcher SEE ALSO grep(1) May 2020 AG(1)