bp/bp.1.md
2022-04-01 12:25:12 -04:00

11 KiB

% BP(1) % Bruce Hill (bruce@bruce-hill.com) % May 17 2021

NAME

bp - Bruce's Parsing Expression Grammar tool

SYNOPSIS

bp [options...] pattern [[--] files...]

DESCRIPTION

bp is a tool that matches parsing expression grammars using a custom syntax.

OPTIONS

-p, --pattern pat
Give a pattern in BP syntax instead of string syntax (equivalent to bp '\(pat)'
-w, --word word
Surround a string pattern with word boundaries (equivalent to bp '\|word\|')
-e, --explain
Print a visual explanation of the matches.
-j, --json
Print a JSON list of the matches. (Pairs with --verbose for more detail)
-l, --list-files
Print only the names of files containing matches instead of the matches themselves.
-i, --ignore-case
Perform pattern matching case-insensitively.
-I, --inplace
Perform filtering or replacement in-place (i.e. overwrite files with new content).
-r, --replace replacement
Replace all occurrences of the main pattern with the given string.
-s, --skip pattern
While looking for matches, skip over pattern occurrences. This can be useful for behavior like bp -s string (avoiding matches inside string literals).
-g, --grammar grammar-file
Load the grammar from the given file. See the GRAMMAR FILES section for more info.
-G, --git
Use git to get a list of files. Remaining file arguments (if any) are passed to git --ls-files instead of treated as literal files.
-B, --context-before N
The number of lines of context to print before each match (default: 0). See --context below for details on none or all.
-A, --context-after N
The number of lines of context to print after each match (default: 0). See --context below for details on none or all.
-C, --context N
The number of lines to print before and after each match (default: 0). If N is none, print only the exact text of the matches. If N is "all", print all text before and after each match.
-f, --format fancy|plain|bare|file:line|auto
Set the output format. fancy includes colors and line numbers, plain prints line numbers with no coloring, bare prints only the match text, file:line prints the filename and line number for each match (grep-style), and auto (the default) uses fancy formatting when the output is a TTY and bare formatting otherwise.
-h, --help
Print the usage and exit.
pattern
The main pattern for bp to match. By default, this pattern is a string pattern (see the STRING PATTERNS section below).
files...
The input files to search. If no input files are provided and data was piped in, that data will be used instead. If neither are provided, bp will search through all files in the current directory and its subdirectories (recursively).

STRING PATTERNS

One of the most common use cases for pattern matching tools is matching plain, literal strings, or strings that are primarily plain strings, with one or two patterns. bp is designed around this fact. The default mode for bp patterns is "string pattern mode". In string pattern mode, all characters are interpreted literally except for the backslash (\), which may be followed by an escape or a bp pattern (see the PATTERNS section below). Optionally, the bp pattern may be terminated by a semicolon (;).

PATTERNS

bp patterns are based off of a combination of Parsing Expression Grammars and regular expression syntax. The syntax is designed to map closely to verbal descriptions of the patterns, and prefix operators are preferred over suffix operators (as is common in regex syntax). Patterns are whitespace-agnostic, so they work the same regardless of whether whitespace is present or not, except for string literals ('...' and "..."), character literals (`), and escape sequences (\). Whitespace between patterns or parts of a pattern should be used for clarity, but it will not affect the meaning of the pattern.

pat1 pat2
A sequence: pat1 followed by pat2
pat1 / pat2
A choice: pat1, or if it doesn't match, then pat2
.
Any character (excluding newline)
^
Start of a line
^^
Start of the text
$
End of a line (does not include newline character)
$$
End of the text
_
Zero or more whitespace characters, including spaces and tabs, but not newlines.
__
Zero or more whitespace characters, including spaces, tabs, newlines, and comments. Comments are undefined by default, but may be defined by a separate grammar file. See the GRAMMAR FILES section for more info.
"foo", 'foo'
The literal string "foo". Single and double quotes are treated the same. Escape sequences are not allowed.
`c
The literal character c (e.g. `@ matches the "@" character)
`c1-c2
The character range c1 to c2 (e.g. `a-z). Multiple ranges can be combined with a comma (e.g. `a-z,A-Z).
`c1,c2
Any one of the given character or character ranges c1 or c2 (e.g. `a,e,i,o,u,0-9)
\esc
An escape sequence (e.g. \n, \x1F, \033, etc.)
\esc1-esc2
An escape sequence range from esc1 to esc2 (e.g. \x00-x1F)
\esc1,esc2
Any one of the given escape sequences or ranges esc1 or esc2 (e.g. \r,n,x01-x04)
\N
A special case escape that matches a "nodent": one or more newlines followed by the same indentation that occurs on the current line.
\i
An identifier character (e.g. alphanumeric characters or underscores).
\I
An identifier character, not including numbers (e.g. alphabetic characters or underscores).
|
A word boundary (i.e. the edge of a word).
\b
Alias for | (word boundary)
! pat
Not pat
[ pat ]
Maybe pat
N pat
Exactly N repetitions of pat (e.g. 5 "x" matches "xxxxx")
N - M pat
Between N and M repetitions of pat (e.g. 2-3 "x" matches "xx" or "xxx")
N+ pat
At least N or more repetitions of pat (e.g. 2+ "x" matches "xx", "xxx", "xxxx", etc.)
* pat
Any pats (zero or more, e.g. * "x" matches "", "x", "xx", etc.)
+ pat
Some pats (e.g. + "x" matches "x", "xx", "xxx", etc.)
repeating-pat % sep
repeating-pat (see the examples above) separated by sep (e.g. *word % "," matches zero or more comma-separated words)
.. pat
Any text (except newlines) up to and including pat
.. % skip pat
Any text (except newlines) up to and including pat, skipping over instances of skip (e.g. '"' ..%('\' .) '"' opening quote, up to closing quote, skipping over backslash followed by a single character)
.. = only pat
Any number of repetitions of the pattern only up to and including pat (e.g. "f" ..=abc "k" matches the letter "f" followed by some alphabetic characters and then a "k", which would match "fork", but not "free kit") This is essentially a "non-greedy" version of *, and .. pat can be thought of as the special case of ..=. pat
< pat
Matches at the current position if pat matches immediately before the current position (lookbehind). Conceptually, you can think of this as creating a file containing only the N characters immediately before the current position and attempting to match pat on that file, for all values of N from the minimum number of characters pat can match up to maximum number of characters pat can match (or the length of the current line upto the current position, whichever is smaller). Note: For fixed-length lookbehinds, this is quite efficient (e.g. <(100 "x")), however this could cause performance problems with variable-length lookbehinds (e.g. <("x" 0-100"y")). Also, it is worth noting that ^, ^^, $, and $$ all match against the edges of the slice, which may give false positives if you were expecting them to match only against the edges file or line.
> pat
Matches pat, but does not consume any input (lookahead).
@ pat
Capture pat
foo
The named pattern whose name is "foo". Pattern names come from definitions in grammar files or from named captures. Pattern names may contain dashes (-), but not underscores (_), since the underscore is used to match whitespace. See the GRAMMAR FILES section for more info.
@ name = pat
Let name equal pat (named capture). Named captures can be used as backreferences like so: @foo=word `( foo `) (matches "asdf(asdf)" or "baz(baz)", but not "foo(baz)")
pat => "replacement"
Replace pat with replacement. Note: replacement should be a string (single or double quoted), and it may contain escape sequences (e.g. \n) or references to captured values: @0 (the whole of pat), @1 (the first capture in pat), @foo (the capture named foo in pat), etc. For example, @word _ @rest=(*word % _) => "@rest:\n\t@1" matches a word followed by whitespace, followed by a series of words and replaces it with the series of words, a colon, a newline, a tab, and then the first word.
pat1 ~ pat2
Matches when pat1 matches and pat2 can be found within the text of that match. (e.g. comment ~ {TODO} matches comments that contain the word "TODO")
pat1 !~ pat2
Matches when pat1 matches, but pat2 can not be found within the text of that match. (e.g. comment ~ {IGNORE} matches only comments that do not contain the word "IGNORE")
name: pat
Define name to mean pat (pattern definition)
# comment
A line comment

GRAMMAR FILES

bp allows loading extra grammar files, which define patterns which may be used for matching. The builtins grammar file is loaded by default, and it defines a few useful general-purpose patterns. For example, it defines the parens rule, which matches pairs of matching parentheses, accounting for nested inner parentheses:

bp -p '"my_func" parens'

bp also comes with a few grammar files for common programming languages, which may be loaded on demand. These grammar files are not comprehensive syntax definitions, but only some common patterns. For example, the c++ grammar file contains definitions for //-style line comments as well as /*...*/-style block comments. Thus, you can find all comments with the word "TODO" with the following command:

bp -g c++ -p 'comment ~ {TODO}' *.cpp

EXAMPLES

Find files containing the string "foo" (a string pattern):

ls | bp foo

Find files ending with ".c" and print the name with the ".c" replaced with ".h":

ls | bp '.c\$' -r '.h'

Find the word "foobar", followed by a pair of matching parentheses in the file my_file.py:

bp -p '{foobar} parens' my_file.py

Using the html grammar, find all elements matching the tag a in the file foo.html:

bp -g html -p 'element ~ (^^"<a ")' foo.html