amber is a code search and replace tool written by Rust.
This tool is inspired by ack,
ag, and other grep-like tools.
Recursively search from the current directory
Ignore VCS directories (.git, .hg, .svn, .bzr)
Ignore binary files
Output by the colored format
Large files (> 1MB by default) are divided and searched in parallel.
amber can replace a keyword over directories (traditionally by find … | xargs sed -i ‘…’) .
You can decide to do replacing or not interactively.
Install the amber-search-git package from AUR.
yaourt -S amber-search-git
You can install with cargo.
Download from release page, and extract to the directory in PATH.
Two commands (ambs/ambr) are provided. ambs means “amber search”, and ambr means “amber replace”.
The search keyword is not regular expression by default. If you want to use regular expression, add –regex.
ambs keyword // recursively search ‘keyword’ from the current directory.
ambs keyword path // recursively search ‘keyword’ from ‘path’.
ambr keyword replacement // recursively search ‘keyword’ from the current directory, and replace to ‘replacement’ interactively.
ambr keyword replacement path // recursively search ‘keyword’ from ‘path’, and replace to ‘replacement’ interactively.
amber replace interactively by default. If the keyword is found, the following prompt is shown, and wait.
If you input ‘y’, ‘Y’, ‘Yes’, the keyword is replaced. ‘a’, ‘A’, ‘All’ means replacing all keywords non-interactively.
Replace keyword? ( Yes[Y], No[N], All[A], Quit[Q] ):
If –regex option is enabled, regex captures can be used in replacement of ambr.
$ cat text.txt
aaa bbb
$ ambr –no-interactive –regex ‘(aaa) (?bbb)’ ‘$1 $pat ${1} ${pat}’ test.txt
$ cat text.txt
aaa bbb aaa bbb
You can change configuration by writing a configuration file.
The locations of the configuration file is OS-specific:
Linux: ~/.config/amber/ambs.toml, /etc/amber/ambs.toml
macOS: ~/Library/Preferences/com.github.dalance.amber/ambs.toml, /etc/amber/ambs.toml
Windows: ~/AppData/Roaming/dalance/amber/config/ambs.toml
For compatibility, if ~/.ambs.toml exists, it will be preferred to
the OS-specific locations.
The above paths are examples for the configuration of ambs command.
ambr.toml in the same directory is used for ambr command.
Available entries and default values are below:
regex =false
column =false
row =false
binary =false
statistics =false
skipped =false
interactive =true
recursive =true
symlink =true
color =true
file =true
skip_vcs =true
skip_gitignore=true
fixed_order =true
parent_ignore =true
line_by_match =false
You can choose some entries to override like below:
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6134 CPU @ 3.20GHz
MEM: 1.5TB
OS : CentOS 7.5
source1: https://github.com/torvalds/linux ( 52998files, 2.2GB )
source2: https://dumps.wikimedia.org/jawiki/latest/jawiki-latest-pages-articles.xml.bz2 ( 1file, 8.5GB )
pattern1( many files with many matches ) : ‘EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL’ in source1
pattern2( many files with few matches ) : ‘irq_bypass_register_producer’ in source1
pattern3( a large file with many matches ) : ‘検索結果’ in source2
pattern4( a large file with few matches ) : ‘”Quick Search”‘ in source2
amber (v0.5.1)
ripgrep (v0.10.0)
grep (v2.20)
fastmod (v0.2.0)
find/sed (v4.5.11/v4.2.2)
hyperfine with the following options.
–warmup 3: to load all data on memory.
search ( compare_ambs.sh )
pattern
amber
ripgrep
grep
1
212.8ms ( 139% )
154.1ms ( 100% )
685.2ms ( 448% )
2
199.7ms ( 132% )
151.6ms ( 100% )
678.7ms ( 448% )
3
1.068s ( 100% )
4.642s ( 434% )
3.869s ( 362% )
4
1.027s ( 100% )
4.409s ( 429% )
3.118s ( 304% )
replace ( compare_ambr.sh )
pattern
amber
fastmod
find/sed
1
792.2ms ( 100% )
1231ms ( 155% )
155724ms ( 19657% )
2
418.1ms ( 119% )
352.4ms ( 100% )
157396ms ( 44663% )
3
18.390s ( 100% )
74.282s ( 404% )
639.740s ( 3479% )
4
17.777s ( 100% )
74.204s ( 417% )
625.756s ( 3520% )
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