2.1.5 Context Line Control ¶
Context lines are non-matching lines that are near a matching line.
They are output only if one of the following options are used.
Regardless of how these options are set,
grep
never outputs any given line more than once.
If the -o (--only-matching) option is specified,
these options have no effect and a warning is given upon their use.
- -A num
- --after-context=num
-
Print num lines of trailing context after matching lines.
- -B num
- --before-context=num
-
Print num lines of leading context before matching lines.
- -C num
- -num
- --context=num
-
Print num lines of leading and trailing output context.
- --group-separator=string
-
When -A, -B or -C are in use,
print string instead of -- between groups of lines.
- --no-group-separator
-
When -A, -B or -C are in use,
do not print a separator between groups of lines.
Here are some points about how grep
chooses
the separator to print between prefix fields and line content:
- Matching lines normally use ‘:’ as a separator
between prefix fields and actual line content.
- Context (i.e., non-matching) lines use ‘-’ instead.
- When context is not specified,
matching lines are simply output one right after another.
- When context is specified,
lines that are adjacent in the input form a group
and are output one right after another, while
by default a separator appears between non-adjacent groups.
- The default separator
is a ‘--’ line; its presence and appearance
can be changed with the options above.
- Each group may contain
several matching lines when they are close enough to each other
that two adjacent groups connect and can merge into a single
contiguous one.