ripgrep
is a command line search tool that combines the usability of The
Silver Searcher (an ack
clone) with the raw speed of GNU grep. ripgrep
has
first class support on Windows, Mac and Linux, with binary downloads available
for every release.
Dual-licensed under MIT or the UNLICENSE.
This example searches the entire Linux kernel source tree (after running
make defconfig && make -j8
) for [A-Z]+_SUSPEND
, where all matches must be
words. Timings were collected on a system with an Intel i7-6900K 3.2 GHz.
Please remember that a single benchmark is never enough! See my
blog post on ripgrep
for a very detailed comparison with more benchmarks and analysis.
Tool | Command | Line count | Time |
---|---|---|---|
ripgrep | rg -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' |
450 | 0.245s |
The Silver Searcher | ag -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' |
450 | 0.753s |
git grep | LC_ALL=C git grep -E -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' |
450 | 0.823s |
git grep | LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 git grep -E -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' |
450 | 2.880s |
sift | sift --git -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' |
450 | 3.656s |
The Platinum Searcher | pt -w -e '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' |
450 | 12.369s |
ack | ack -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' |
1878 | 16.952s |
- It can replace both The Silver Searcher and GNU grep because it is faster than both. (N.B. It is not, strictly speaking, a "drop-in" replacement for both, but the feature sets are far more similar than different.)
- Like The Silver Searcher,
ripgrep
defaults to recursive directory search and won't search files ignored by your.gitignore
files. It also ignores hidden and binary files by default.ripgrep
also implements full support for.gitignore
, where as there are many bugs related to that functionality in The Silver Searcher. ripgrep
can search specific types of files. For example,rg -tpy foo
limits your search to Python files andrg -Tjs foo
excludes Javascript files from your search.ripgrep
can be taught about new file types with custom matching rules.ripgrep
supports many features found ingrep
, such as showing the context of search results, searching multiple patterns, highlighting matches with color and full Unicode support. Unlike GNU grep,ripgrep
stays fast while supporting Unicode (which is always on).
In other words, use ripgrep
if you like speed, sane defaults, fewer bugs and
Unicode.
Yes. A large number of benchmarks with detailed analysis for each is available on my blog.
Summarizing, ripgrep
is fast because:
- It is built on top of Rust's regex engine. Rust's regex engine uses finite automata, SIMD and aggressive literal optimizations to make searching very fast.
- Rust's regex library maintains performance with full Unicode support by building UTF-8 decoding directly into its deterministic finite automaton engine.
- It supports searching with either memory maps or by searching incrementally
with an intermediate buffer. The former is better for single files and the
latter is better for large directories.
ripgrep
chooses the best searching strategy for you automatically. - Applies your ignore patterns in
.gitignore
files using aRegexSet
. That means a single file path can be matched against multiple glob patterns simultaneously. - Uses a Chase-Lev work-stealing queue for quickly distributing work to multiple threads.
The binary name for ripgrep
is rg
.
Binaries for ripgrep
are available for Windows, Mac and
Linux. Linux binaries are
static executables. Windows binaries are available either as built with MinGW
(GNU) or with Microsoft Visual C++ (MSVC). When possible, prefer MSVC over GNU,
but you'll need to have the
Microsoft VC++ 2015 redistributable
installed.
If you're a Homebrew user, then you can install it with a custom formula
(N.B. ripgrep
isn't actually in Homebrew yet. This just installs the binary
directly):
$ brew install https://raw.githubusercontent.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep/master/pkg/brew/ripgrep.rb
If you're an Arch Linux user, then you can install ripgrep
from the official repos:
$ pacman -Syu ripgrep
If you're a Rust programmer, ripgrep
can be installed with cargo
:
$ cargo install ripgrep
ripgrep
isn't currently in any other package repositories.
I'd like to change that.
The command line usage of ripgrep
doesn't differ much from other tools that
perform a similar function, so you probably already know how to use ripgrep
.
The full details can be found in rg --help
, but let's go on a whirlwind tour.
ripgrep
detects when its printing to a terminal, and will automatically
colorize your output and show line numbers, just like The Silver Searcher.
Coloring works on Windows too! Colors can be controlled more granularly with
the --color
flag.
One last thing before we get started: ripgrep
assumes UTF-8 everywhere. It
can still search files that are invalid UTF-8 (like, say, latin-1), but it will
simply not work on UTF-16 encoded files or other more exotic encodings.
Support for other encodings may
happen.
To recursively search the current directory, while respecting all .gitignore
files, ignore hidden files and directories and skip binary files:
$ rg foobar
The above command also respects all .ignore
files, including in parent
directories. .ignore
files can be used when .gitignore
files are
insufficient. In all cases, .ignore
patterns take precedence over
.gitignore
.
To ignore all ignore files, use -u
. To additionally search hidden files
and directories, use -uu
. To additionally search binary files, use -uuu
.
(In other words, "search everything, dammit!") In particular, rg -uuu
is
similar to grep -a -r
.
$ rg -uu foobar # similar to `grep -r`
$ rg -uuu foobar # similar to `grep -a -r`
(Tip: If your ignore files aren't being adhered to like you expect, run your
search with the --debug
flag.)
Make the search case insensitive with -i
, invert the search with -v
or
show the 2 lines before and after every search result with -C2
.
Force all matches to be surrounded by word boundaries with -w
.
Search and replace (find first and last names and swap them):
$ rg '([A-Z][a-z]+)\s+([A-Z][a-z]+)' --replace '$2, $1'
Named groups are supported:
$ rg '(?P<first>[A-Z][a-z]+)\s+(?P<last>[A-Z][a-z]+)' --replace '$last, $first'
Up the ante with full Unicode support, by matching any uppercase Unicode letter followed by any sequence of lowercase Unicode letters (good luck doing this with other search tools!):
$ rg '(\p{Lu}\p{Ll}+)\s+(\p{Lu}\p{Ll}+)' --replace '$2, $1'
Search only files matching a particular glob:
$ rg foo -g 'README.*'
Or exclude files matching a particular glob:
$ rg foo -g '!*.min.js'
Search only HTML and CSS files:
$ rg -thtml -tcss foobar
Search everything except for Javascript files:
$ rg -Tjs foobar
To see a list of types supported, run rg --type-list
. To add a new type, use
--type-add
:
$ rg --type-add 'foo:*.{foo,foobar}'
The type foo
will now match any file ending with the .foo
or .foobar
extensions.
The syntax supported is documented as part of Rust's regex library.
ripgrep
is written in Rust, so you'll need to grab a
Rust installation in order to compile it.
ripgrep
compiles with Rust 1.9 (stable) or newer. Building is easy:
$ git clone https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep
$ cd ripgrep
$ cargo build --release
$ ./target/release/rg --version
0.1.3
If you have a Rust nightly compiler, then you can enable optional SIMD acceleration like so:
RUSTFLAGS="-C target-cpu=native" cargo build --release --features simd-accel
ripgrep
is relatively well tested, including both unit tests and integration
tests. To run the full test suite, use:
$ cargo test
from the repository root.