GNU grep NEWS -*- outline -*-
* Noteworthy changes in release 3.8 (2022-09-02) [stable]
** Changes in behavior
The -P option is now based on PCRE2 instead of the older PCRE,
thanks to code contributed by Carlo Arenas.
The egrep and fgrep commands, which have been deprecated since
release 2.5.3 (2007), now warn that they are obsolescent and should
be replaced by grep -E and grep -F.
The confusing GREP_COLOR environment variable is now obsolescent.
Instead of GREP_COLOR='xxx', use GREP_COLORS='mt=xxx'. grep now
warns if GREP_COLOR is used and is not overridden by GREP_COLORS.
Also, grep now treats GREP_COLOR like GREP_COLORS by silently
ignoring it if it attempts to inject ANSI terminal escapes.
Regular expressions with stray backslashes now cause warnings, as
their unspecified behavior can lead to unexpected results.
For example, '\a' and 'a' are not always equivalent
<https://bugs.gnu.org/39678>. Similarly, regular expressions or
subexpressions that start with a repetition operator now also cause
warnings due to their unspecified behavior; for example, *a(+b|{1}c)
now has three reasons to warn. The warnings are intended as a
transition aid; they are likely to be errors in future releases.
Regular expressions like [:space:] are now errors even if
POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, since POSIX now allows the GNU behavior.
** Bug fixes
In locales using UTF-8 encoding, the regular expression '.' no
longer sometimes fails to match Unicode characters U+D400 through
U+D7FF (some Hangul Syllables, and Hangul Jamo Extended-B) and
Unicode characters U+108000 through U+10FFFF (half of Supplemental
Private Use Area plane B).
[bug introduced in grep 3.4]
The -s option no longer suppresses "binary file matches" messages.
[Bug#51860 introduced in grep 3.5]
** Documentation improvements
The manual now covers unspecified behavior in patterns like \x, (+),
and range expressions outside the POSIX locale.
* Noteworthy changes in release 3.7 (2021-08-14) [stable]
** Changes in behavior
Use of the --unix-byte-offsets (-u) option now evokes a warning.
Since 3.1, this Windows-only option has had no effect.
** Bug fixes
Preprocessing N patterns would take at least O(N^2) time when too many
patterns hashed to too few buckets. This now takes seconds, not days:
: | grep -Ff <(seq 6400000 | tr 0-9 A-J)
[Bug#44754 introduced in grep 3.5]
* Noteworthy changes in release 3.6 (2020-11-08) [stable]
** Changes in behavior
The GREP_OPTIONS environment variable no longer affects grep's behavior.
The variable was declared obsolescent in grep 2.21 (2014), and since
then any use had caused grep to issue a diagnostic.
** Bug fixes
grep's DFA matcher performed an invalid regex transformation
that would convert an ERE like a+a+a+ to a+a+, which would make
grep a+a+a+ mistakenly match "aa".
[Bug#44351 introduced in grep 3.2]
grep -P now reports the troublesome input filename upon PCRE execution
failure. Before, searching many files for something rare might fail with
just "exceeded PCRE's backtracking limit". Now, it also reports which file
triggered the failure.
* Noteworthy changes in release 3.5 (2020-09-27) [stable]
** Changes in behavior
The message that a binary file matches is now sent to standard error
and the message has been reworded from "Binary file FOO matches" to
"grep: FOO: binary file matches", to avoid confusion with ordinary
output or when file names contain spaces and the like, and to be
more consistent with other diagnostics. For example, commands
like 'grep PATTERN FILE | wc' no longer add 1 to the count of
matching text lines due to the presence of the message. Like other
stderr messages, the message is now omitted if the --no-messages
(-s) option is given.
Two other stderr messages now use the typical form too. They are
now "grep: FOO: warning: recursive directory loop" and "grep: FOO:
input file is also the output".
The --files-without-match (-L) option has reverted to its behavior
in grep 3.1 and earlier. That is, grep -L again succeeds when a
line is selected, not when a file is listed. The behavior in grep
3.2 through 3.4 was causing compatibility problems.
** Bug fixes
grep -I no longer issues a spurious "Binary file FOO matches" line.
[Bug#33552 introduced in grep 2.23]
In UTF-8 locales, grep -w no longer ignores a multibyte word
constituent just before what would otherwise be a word match.
[Bug#43225 introduced in grep 2.28]
grep -i no longer mishandles ASCII characters that match multibyte
characters. For example, 'LC_ALL=tr_TR.utf8 grep -i i' no longer
dumps core merely because 'i' matches 'İ' (U+0130 LATIN CAPITAL
LETTER I WITH DOT ABOVE) in Turkish when ignoring case.
[Bug#43577 introduced partly in grep 2.28 and partly in grep 3.4]
A performance regression with -E and many patterns has been mostly fixed.
"Mostly" as there is a performance tradeoff between Bug#22357 and Bug#40634.
[Bug#40634 introduced in grep 2.28]
A performance regression with many duplicate patterns has been fixed.
[Bug#43040 introduced in grep 3.4]
An N^2 RSS performance regression with many patterns has been fixed
in common cases (no backref, and no use of -o or --color).
With only 80,000 lines of /usr/share/dict/linux.words, the following
would use 100GB of RSS and take 3 minutes. With the fix, it used less
than 400MB and took less than one second:
head -80000 /usr/share/dict/linux.words > w; grep -vf w w
[Bug#43527 introduced in grep 3.4]
** Build-related
"make dist" builds .tar.gz files again, as they are still used in
some barebones builds.
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Martin Iturbide
Ven, 04/08/2023 - 02:59
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