To be precise
Some text
begin
Some text goes here.
end
Some more textand I want to extract entire block that starts from "begin" till "end".
with awk we can do like awk '/begin/,/end/' text.
How to do with grep?
12 Answers
Updated 18-Nov-2016 (since grep behavior is changed: grep with -P parameter now doesn't support ^ and $ anchors [on Ubuntu 16.04 with kernel v:4.4.0-21-generic])(wrong (non-)fix)
$ grep -Pzo "begin(.|\n)*\nend" file
begin
Some text goes here.
endnote: for other commands just replace the '^' & '$' anchors with new-line anchor '\n'______________________________
With grep command:
grep -Pzo "^begin\$(.|\n)*^end$" fileIf you want don't include the patterns "begin" and "end" in result, use grep with Lookbehind and Lookahead support.
grep -Pzo "(?<=^begin$\n)(.|\n)*(?=\n^end$)" fileAlso you can use \K notify instead of Lookbehind assertion.
grep -Pzo "^begin$\n\K(.|\n)*(?=\n^end$)" file\K option ignore everything before pattern matching and ignore pattern itself.\n used for avoid printing empty lines from output.
Or as @AvinashRaj suggests there are simple easy grep as following:
grep -Pzo "(?s)^begin$.*?^end$" file
grep -Pzo "^begin\$[\s\S]*?^end$" file(?s) tells grep to allow the dot to match newline characters.[\s\S] matches any character that is either whitespace or non-whitespace.
And their output without including "begin" and "end" is as following:
grep -Pzo "^begin$\n\K[\s\S]*?(?=\n^end$)" file # or grep -Pzo "(?<=^begin$\n)[\s\S]*?(?=\n^end$)"
grep -Pzo "(?s)(?<=^begin$\n).*?(?=\n^end$)" filesee the full test of all commands here (out of dated as grep behavior with -P parameter is changed)
Note:
^ point the beginning of a line and $ point the end of a line. these added to the around of "begin" and "end" to matching them if they are alone in a line.
In two commands I escaped $ because it also using for "Command Substitution"($(command)) that allows the output of a command to replace the command name.
From man grep:
-o, --only-matching Print only the matched (non-empty) parts of a matching line, with each such part on a separate output line.
-P, --perl-regexp Interpret PATTERN as a Perl compatible regular expression (PCRE)
-z, --null-data Treat the input as a set of lines, each terminated by a zero byte (the ASCII NUL character) instead of a newline. Like the -Z or --null option, this option can be used with commands like sort -z to process arbitrary file names. 22 In case your grep doesn't support perl syntax (-P), you can try joining the lines, matching the pattern, then expanding the lines again as below:
$ tr '\n' , < foo.txt | grep -o "begin.*end" | tr , '\n'
begin
Some text goes here.
end