This program is the numeric equivilent of the grep utility.
numgrep [-dhlV] <\s-1FILE\s0>
| numgrep [-dhlV] (Input on \s-1STDIN\s0 from pipeline.)
numgrep [-dhlV] (Input on \s-1STDIN\s0. Use Ctrl-D to stop.)
numgrep searches for different occurances of numbers through the use of numeric expressions.
-l Print the matching numbers out one per line instead of printing the entire line they are on. -h Help: You're looking at it. -V Increase verbosity. -d Debug mode. For developers
numgrep uses a special numeric expression matching system. Basically, it searches for ranges, factors and sequences of numbers. Here is a list of the syntax characters and some sample expressions that will get you going:
/<expression>/ Put your expression or set of expressions between these two forward slashes.
.. Range expression. A number must be used on the left and/or right of this expression to specify that numbers between, greater than or less than the numbers specified should be matched.
, Expression sepeartor. The comma sepearates one complete expression from another in a set enclosed by //.
m<n> Multiples of <n>. This operator, followed by a number <n> will match any number <x> that is an integer multiple of <n>. Meaning that <x> = <n> times <y>, where <y> is any integer.
f<n> Factors of <n>. This operator, followed by a number <n> will match any number <x> that is an integer factor of <n>. Meaning that <x> = <n> divided by <y>, where <y> is any integer.
\s-1NOTE:\s0 Checking for factors and multiples is very fast because it
is checked by doing a single modulus operation on two numbers.
Examples:
/2..10/ Match any number between 2 and 10.
/2..10,20..30/ Match any number between 2 and 10 or between 20 and 30.
/56,34,512,45,67/ Match any of the numbers 56, 34, 512, 45 or 67.
/m3/ Match any integer that is a multiple of 3.
/f1024/ Match any integer that is a factor of 1024.
$ numrange -N /1..1000/ | numgrep /f1024/ 1 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 256 512 $
numgrep can't handle certain situations properly. Such as if it encounters a number with leading zeros, it will treat it as an octal number and thus might not match the way you would expect.
numgrep does not yet allow you to mix numbers and text in the matching expression. So you can not do something like 'numgrep /port=0..1023/ firewall.log'. But this will be changed in the future.
numaverage\|(1), numbound\|(1), numinterval\|(1), numnormalize\|(1), numprocess\|(1), numsum\|(1), numrandom\|(1), numrange\|(1), numround\|(1)
numgrep is part of the num-utils package, which is copyrighted by Suso Banderas and released under the \s-1GPL\s0 license. Please read the \s-1COPYING\s0 and \s-1LICENSE\s0 files that came with the num-utils package
Developers can read the GOALS file and contact me about providing submitions or help for the project.
numgrep will round decimal numbers with more than 15 digits of accuracy. This is mostly due to limit's in the way programming languages deal directly with numbers.
More info on numgrep can be found at: