Process a binary file as if it were text; this is equivalent to the ‘--binary-files=text’ option.
If a file’s data or metadata indicate that the file contains binary data, assume that the file is of type type. Non-text bytes indicate binary data; these are either output bytes that are improperly encoded for the current locale (see Environment Variables), or null input bytes when the -z (--null-data) option is not given (see Other Options).
By default, type is ‘binary’, and grep
suppresses output after null input binary data is discovered,
and suppresses output lines that contain improperly encoded data.
When some output is suppressed, grep
follows any output
with a message to standard error saying that a binary file matches.
If type is ‘without-match’,
when grep
discovers null input binary data
it assumes that the rest of the file does not match;
this is equivalent to the -I option.
If type is ‘text’,
grep
processes binary data as if it were text;
this is equivalent to the -a option.
When type is ‘binary’, grep
may treat non-text
bytes as line terminators even without the -z
(--null-data) option. This means choosing ‘binary’
versus ‘text’ can affect whether a pattern matches a file. For
example, when type is ‘binary’ the pattern ‘q$’ might
match ‘q’ immediately followed by a null byte, even though this
is not matched when type is ‘text’. Conversely, when
type is ‘binary’ the pattern ‘.’ (period) might not
match a null byte.
Warning: The -a (--binary-files=text) option might output binary garbage, which can have nasty side effects if the output is a terminal and if the terminal driver interprets some of it as commands. On the other hand, when reading files whose text encodings are unknown, it can be helpful to use -a or to set ‘LC_ALL='C'’ in the environment, in order to find more matches even if the matches are unsafe for direct display.
If an input file is a device, FIFO, or socket, use action to process it. If action is ‘read’, all devices are read just as if they were ordinary files. If action is ‘skip’, devices, FIFOs, and sockets are silently skipped. By default, devices are read if they are on the command line or if the -R (--dereference-recursive) option is used, and are skipped if they are encountered recursively and the -r (--recursive) option is used. This option has no effect on a file that is read via standard input.
If an input file is a directory, use action to process it.
By default, action is ‘read’,
which means that directories are read just as if they were ordinary files
(some operating systems and file systems disallow this,
and will cause grep
to print error messages for every directory or silently skip them).
If action is ‘skip’, directories are silently skipped.
If action is ‘recurse’,
grep
reads all files under each directory, recursively,
following command-line symbolic links and skipping other symlinks;
this is equivalent to the -r option.
Skip any command-line file with a name suffix that matches the pattern
glob, using wildcard matching; a name suffix is either the whole
name, or a trailing part that starts with a non-slash character
immediately after a slash (‘/’) in the name.
When searching recursively, skip any subfile whose base
name matches glob; the base name is the part after the last
slash. A pattern can use
‘*’, ‘?’, and ‘[’...‘]’ as wildcards,
and \
to quote a wildcard or backslash character literally.
Skip files whose name matches any of the patterns read from file (using wildcard matching as described under --exclude).
Skip any command-line directory with a name suffix that matches the pattern glob. When searching recursively, skip any subdirectory whose base name matches glob. Ignore any redundant trailing slashes in glob.
Process a binary file as if it did not contain matching data; this is equivalent to the ‘--binary-files=without-match’ option.
Search only files whose name matches glob, using wildcard matching as described under --exclude. If contradictory --include and --exclude options are given, the last matching one wins. If no --include or --exclude options match, a file is included unless the first such option is --include.
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that directory, recursively. Follow symbolic links on the command line, but skip symlinks that are encountered recursively. Note that if no file operand is given, grep searches the working directory. This is the same as the ‘--directories=recurse’ option.
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that directory, recursively, following all symbolic links.