Sep 27 2009

Findstr, a Native Alternative to grep in Windows

Published by at 9:51 pm under Windows

A builtin equivalent to the Unix/Linux grep command is available in Windows, a bit less powerful though: findstr. You can do searches based on patterns, still in a measured way.
You don’t need to install anything, it is natively present on all Windows flavours.


Findstr Options

C:\>findstr /?
Searches for strings in files.

FINDSTR [/B] [/E] [/L] [/R] [/S] [/I] [/X] [/V] [/N] [/M] [/O] [/P] [/F:file]
[/C:string] [/G:file] [/D:dir list] [/A:color attributes] [/OFF[LINE]]
strings [[drive:][path]filename[ ...]]


/B Matches pattern if at the beginning of a line.
/E Matches pattern if at the end of a line.
/L Uses search strings literally.
/R Uses search strings as regular expressions.
/S Searches for matching files in the current directory and all
subdirectories.
/I Specifies that the search is not to be case-sensitive.
/X Prints lines that match exactly.
/V Prints only lines that do not contain a match.
/N Prints the line number before each line that matches.
/M Prints only the filename if a file contains a match.
/O Prints character offset before each matching line.
/P Skip files with non-printable characters.
/OFF[LINE] Do not skip files with offline attribute set.
/A:attr Specifies color attribute with two hex digits. See “color /?”
/F:file Reads file list from the specified file(/ stands for console).
/C:string Uses specified string as a literal search string.
/G:file Gets search strings from the specified file(/ stands for console).
/D:dir Search a semicolon delimited list of directories
strings Text to be searched for.
[drive:][path]filename
Specifies a file or files to search.

Use spaces to separate multiple search strings unless the argument is prefixed
with /C. For example, ‘FINDSTR “hello there” x.y’ searches for “hello” or
“there” in file x.y. ‘FINDSTR /C:”hello there” x.y’ searches for
“hello there” in file x.y.

Regular expression quick reference:
. Wildcard: any character
* Repeat: zero or more occurrences of previous character or class
^ Line position: beginning of line
$ Line position: end of line
[class] Character class: any one character in set
[^class] Inverse class: any one character not in set
[x-y] Range: any characters within the specified range
\x Escape: literal use of metacharacter x
\<xyz Word position: beginning of word
xyz\> Word position: end of word

For full information on FINDSTR regular expressions refer to the online Command
Reference.


Command Usage Example

Pipe the previous command result to findstr, as you would with the grep command in Linux:

C:\>netstat -an | findstr 0.0.0.0
  TCP    0.0.0.0:135            0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    0.0.0.0:445            0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    0.0.0.0:1033           0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    0.0.0.0:3389           0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    10.0.0.10:139          0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    10.1.0.10:139          0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    192.168.15.240:139     0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  UDP    0.0.0.0:445            *:*
  UDP    0.0.0.0:500            *:*
  UDP    0.0.0.0:4500           *:*

3 responses so far

3 Responses to “Findstr, a Native Alternative to grep in Windows”

  1. shishiron 24 Sep 2010 at 11:51 am

    fantastic ! just what I was looking for. As I am used to grep, I was looking for an alternative in windows

  2. shivanandon 16 Aug 2011 at 8:14 am

    useful!!!

  3. dillagron 22 Mar 2012 at 3:24 am

    this is a nice tip. thanks!

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