ripgrep (rg)

ripgrep is a line-oriented search tool that recursively searches your current directory for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore rules. ripgrep has first class support on Windows, macOS and Linux, with binary downloads available for every release. ripgrep is similar to other popular search tools like The Silver Searcher, ack and grep.

Linux build status Windows build status Crates.io

Dual-licensed under MIT or the UNLICENSE.

CHANGELOG

Please see the CHANGELOG for a release history.

Documentation quick links

Screenshot of search results

A screenshot of a sample search with ripgrep

Quick examples comparing tools

This example searches the entire Linux kernel source tree (after running make defconfig && make -j8) for [A-Z]+_SUSPEND, where all matches must be words. Timings were collected on a system with an Intel i7-6900K 3.2 GHz, and ripgrep was compiled with SIMD enabled.

Please remember that a single benchmark is never enough! See my blog post on ripgrep for a very detailed comparison with more benchmarks and analysis.

| Tool | Command | Line count | Time | | ---- | ------- | ---------- | ---- | | ripgrep (Unicode) | rg -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 450 | 0.106s | | git grep | LC_ALL=C git grep -E -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 450 | 0.553s | | The Silver Searcher | ag -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 450 | 0.589s | | git grep (Unicode) | LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 git grep -E -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 450 | 2.266s | | sift | sift --git -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 450 | 3.505s | | ack | ack -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 1878 | 6.823s | | The Platinum Searcher | pt -w -e '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 450 | 14.208s |

(Yes, ack has a bug.)

Here's another benchmark that disregards gitignore files and searches with a whitelist instead. The corpus is the same as in the previous benchmark, and the flags passed to each command ensure that they are doing equivalent work:

| Tool | Command | Line count | Time | | ---- | ------- | ---------- | ---- | | ripgrep | rg -L -u -tc -n -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 404 | 0.079s | | ucg | ucg --type=cc -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 390 | 0.163s | | GNU grep | egrep -R -n --include='*.c' --include='*.h' -w '[A-Z]+_SUSPEND' | 404 | 0.611s |

(ucg has slightly different behavior in the presence of symbolic links.)

And finally, a straight-up comparison between ripgrep and GNU grep on a single large file (~9.3GB, OpenSubtitles2016.raw.en.gz):

| Tool | Command | Line count | Time | | ---- | ------- | ---------- | ---- | | ripgrep | rg -w 'Sherlock [A-Z]\w+' | 5268 | 2.108s | | GNU grep | LC_ALL=C egrep -w 'Sherlock [A-Z]\w+' | 5268 | 7.014s |

In the above benchmark, passing the -n flag (for showing line numbers) increases the times to 2.640s for ripgrep and 10.277s for GNU grep.

Why should I use ripgrep?

In other words, use ripgrep if you like speed, filtering by default, fewer bugs and Unicode support.

Why shouldn't I use ripgrep?

Despite initially not wanting to add every feature under the sun to ripgrep, over time, ripgrep has grown support for most features found in other file searching tools. This includes searching for results spanning across multiple lines, and opt-in support for PCRE2, which provides look-around and backreference support.

At this point, the primary reasons not to use ripgrep probably consist of one or more of the following:

Is it really faster than everything else?

Generally, yes. A large number of benchmarks with detailed analysis for each is available on my blog.

Summarizing, ripgrep is fast because:

Feature comparison

Andy Lester, author of ack, has published an excellent table comparing the features of ack, ag, git-grep, GNU grep and ripgrep: https://beyondgrep.com/feature-comparison/

Note that ripgrep has grown a few significant new features recently that are not yet present in Andy's table. This includes, but is not limited to, configuration files, passthru, support for searching compressed files, multiline search and opt-in fancy regex support via PCRE2.

Installation

The binary name for ripgrep is rg.

Archives of precompiled binaries for ripgrep are available for Windows, macOS and Linux. Users of platforms not explicitly mentioned below are advised to download one of these archives.

Linux binaries are static executables. Windows binaries are available either as built with MinGW (GNU) or with Microsoft Visual C++ (MSVC). When possible, prefer MSVC over GNU, but you'll need to have the Microsoft VC++ 2015 redistributable installed.

If you're a macOS Homebrew or a Linuxbrew user, then you can install ripgrep either from homebrew-core, (compiled with rust stable, no SIMD):

$ brew install ripgrep

or you can install a binary compiled with rust nightly (including SIMD and all optimizations) by utilizing a custom tap:

$ brew tap burntsushi/ripgrep https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep.git $ brew install ripgrep-bin

If you're a MacPorts user, then you can install ripgrep from the official ports:

$ sudo port install ripgrep

If you're a Windows Chocolatey user, then you can install ripgrep from the official repo:

$ choco install ripgrep

If you're a Windows Scoop user, then you can install ripgrep from the official bucket:

$ scoop install ripgrep

If you're an Arch Linux user, then you can install ripgrep from the official repos:

$ pacman -S ripgrep

If you're a Gentoo user, you can install ripgrep from the official repo:

$ emerge sys-apps/ripgrep

If you're a Fedora 27+ user, you can install ripgrep from official repositories.

$ sudo dnf install ripgrep

If you're a Fedora 24+ user, you can install ripgrep from copr:

$ sudo dnf copr enable carlwgeorge/ripgrep $ sudo dnf install ripgrep

If you're an openSUSE Tumbleweed user, you can install ripgrep from the official repo:

$ sudo zypper install ripgrep

If you're a RHEL/CentOS 7 user, you can install ripgrep from copr:

$ sudo yum-config-manager --add-repo=https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/carlwgeorge/ripgrep/repo/epel-7/carlwgeorge-ripgrep-epel-7.repo $ sudo yum install ripgrep

If you're a Nix user, you can install ripgrep from nixpkgs:

$ nix-env --install ripgrep $ # (Or using the attribute name, which is also ripgrep.)

If you're a Debian user (or a user of a Debian derivative like Ubuntu), then ripgrep can be installed using a binary .deb file provided in each ripgrep release. Note that ripgrep is not in the official Debian or Ubuntu repositories.

$ curl -LO https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep/releases/download/0.9.0/ripgrep_0.9.0_amd64.deb $ sudo dpkg -i ripgrep_0.9.0_amd64.deb

If you run Debian Buster (currently Debian testing) or Debian sid, ripgrep is officially maintained by Debian. $ sudo apt-get install ripgrep

(N.B. Various snaps for ripgrep on Ubuntu are also available, but none of them seem to work right and generate a number of very strange bug reports that I don't know how to fix and don't have the time to fix. Therefore, it is no longer a recommended installation option.)

If you're a FreeBSD user, then you can install ripgrep from the official ports:

```

pkg install ripgrep

```

If you're an OpenBSD user, then you can install ripgrep from the official ports:

$ doas pkg_add ripgrep

If you're a NetBSD user, then you can install ripgrep from pkgsrc:

```

pkgin install ripgrep

```

If you're a Rust programmer, ripgrep can be installed with cargo.

$ cargo install ripgrep

When compiling with Rust 1.27 or newer, this will automatically enable SIMD optimizations for search.

ripgrep isn't currently in any other package repositories. I'd like to change that.

Building

ripgrep is written in Rust, so you'll need to grab a Rust installation in order to compile it. ripgrep compiles with Rust 1.28.0 (stable) or newer. In general, ripgrep tracks the latest stable release of the Rust compiler.

To build ripgrep:

$ git clone https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep $ cd ripgrep $ cargo build --release $ ./target/release/rg --version 0.1.3

If you have a Rust nightly compiler and a recent Intel CPU, then you can enable additional optional SIMD acceleration like so:

RUSTFLAGS="-C target-cpu=native" cargo build --release --features 'simd-accel avx-accel'

If your machine doesn't support AVX instructions, then simply remove avx-accel from the features list. Similarly for SIMD (which corresponds roughly to SSE instructions).

The simd-accel and avx-accel features enable SIMD support in certain ripgrep dependencies (responsible for counting lines and transcoding). They are not necessary to get SIMD optimizations for search; those are enabled automatically. Hopefully, some day, the simd-accel and avx-accel features will similarly become unnecessary.

Finally, optional PCRE2 support can be built with ripgrep by enabling the pcre2 feature:

$ cargo build --release --features 'pcre2'

(Tip: use --features 'pcre2 simd-accel avx-accel' to also include compile time SIMD optimizations, which will only work with a nightly compiler.)

Enabling the PCRE2 feature works with a stable Rust compiler and will attempt to automatically find and link with your system's PCRE2 library via pkg-config. If one doesn't exist, then ripgrep will build PCRE2 from source using your system's C compiler and then statically link it into the final executable. Static linking can be forced even when there is an available PCRE2 system library by either building ripgrep with the MUSL target or by setting PCRE2_SYS_STATIC=1.

ripgrep can be built with the MUSL target on Linux by first installing the MUSL library on your system (consult your friendly neighborhood package manager). Then you just need to add MUSL support to your Rust toolchain and rebuild ripgrep, which yields a fully static executable:

$ rustup target add x86_64-unknown-linux-musl $ cargo build --release --target x86_64-unknown-linux-musl

Applying the --features flag from above works as expected. If you want to build a static executable with MUSL and with PCRE2, then you will need to have musl-gcc installed, which might be in a separate package from the actual MUSL library, depending on your Linux distribution.

Running tests

ripgrep is relatively well-tested, including both unit tests and integration tests. To run the full test suite, use:

$ cargo test --all

from the repository root.