Getting the last match in a file using grep

You could try

grep pattern file | tail -1

or

tac file | grep pattern | head -1

or

tac file | grep -m1 pattern

For someone working with huge text files in Unix/Linux/Mac/Cygwin. If you use Windows checkt this out about Linux tools in Windows: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3519738/what-is-the-best-way-to-use-linux-utilities-under-windows.

One can follow this workflow to have good performance:

  1. compress with gzip
  2. use zindex (on github: https://github.com/mattgodbolt/zindex) to index the file with appropriate key
  3. query the indexed file with zq from the package.

Quote from its github readme:

Creating an index

zindex needs to be told what part of each line constitutes the index. This can be done by a regular expression, by field, or by piping each line through an external program.

By default zindex creates an index of file.gz.zindex when asked to index file.gz.

Example:

create an index on lines matching a numeric regular expression. The capture group indicates the part that's to be indexed, and the options show each line has a unique, numeric index.

$ zindex file.gz --regex 'id:([0-9]+)' --numeric --unique

Example: create an index on the second field of a CSV file:

$ zindex file.gz --delimiter , --field 2 

Example:

create an index on a JSON field orderId.id in any of the items in the document root's actions array (requires jq). The jq query creates an array of all the orderId.ids, then joins them with a space to ensure each individual line piped to jq creates a single line of output, with multiple matches separated by spaces (which is the default separator).

$ zindex file.gz --pipe "jq --raw-output --unbuffered '[.actions[].orderId.id] | join(\" \")'" 

Querying the index

The zq program is used to query an index. It's given the name of the compressed file and a list of queries. For example:

$ zq file.gz 1023 4443 554 

It's also possible to output by line number, so to print lines 1 and 1000 from a file:

$ zq file.gz --line 1 1000