Recursively search for files of a given name, and find instances of a particular phrase AND display the path to that file

StackOverflow https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3538987

  •  30-09-2019
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Question

I have a bunch of folders and subfolders. Each one contains, amongst other things, a text file called index.yml with useful data. I want to search through all of the different index.yml files to find instances of a search string. I must be able to see a few lines of context and the directory of the index.yml file that was found.

This almost works, but it doesn't give me the filename:

cat `find . -name 'index.yml'`| grep -i -C4 mySearchString

How can I do this and get the filename?

I am stuck on Windows with using msys. Note I don't seem to have full GNU grep, so I can't run grep --exclude or grep -R as suggested in other SO questions.

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Solution

try this:

find -name "index.yml" -exec grep -i -H -C4 pattern {} \;

note: not actually tested under msys.

OTHER TIPS

One possibility (I don't know what msys accepts exactly):

 find . -name index.yml -exec grep -i -C4 mySearchString /dev/null {} +

The /dev/null serves to ensure there are at least two pathnames so that the pathname is printed with each match. The -H option to grep has a similar effect.

The -exec...+ construct in find causes multiple pathnames to be passed to a single instance of the command. If it is not implemented, you'll have to use -exec...\;.

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