Negative matching using grep (match lines that do not contain foo)
I have been trying to work out the syntax for this command:
grep ! error_log | find /home/foo/public_html/ -mmin -60
OR:
grep '[^error_log]' | find /home/baumerf/public_html/ -mmin -60
I need to see all files that have been modified except for those named error_log
.
I've read about it here, but only found one not
-regex pattern.
grep -v
is your friend:
grep --help | grep invert
-v, --invert-match select non-matching lines
Also check out the related -L
(the complement of -l
).
-L, --files-without-match only print FILE names containing no match
You can also use awk
for these purposes, since it allows you to perform more complex checks in a clearer way:
Lines not containing foo
:
awk '!/foo/'
Lines containing neither foo
nor bar
:
awk '!/foo/ && !/bar/'
Lines containing neither foo
nor bar
which contain either foo2
or bar2
:
awk '!/foo/ && !/bar/ && (/foo2/ || /bar2/)'
And so on.
In your case, you presumably don't want to use grep, but add instead a negative clause to the find command, e.g.
find /home/baumerf/public_html/ -mmin -60 -not -name error_log
If you want to include wildcards in the name, you'll have to escape them, e.g. to exclude files with suffix .log:
find /home/baumerf/public_html/ -mmin -60 -not -name \*.log