28 releases
0.10.0 | Oct 12, 2024 |
---|---|
0.8.2 | Sep 9, 2023 |
0.8.1 | Nov 12, 2022 |
0.8.0 | May 14, 2022 |
0.1.0 | Nov 8, 2017 |
#43 in Command line utilities
2,707 downloads per month
Used in 13 crates
(5 directly)
44KB
943 lines
Ruplacer
Find and replace text in source files:
$ ruplacer old new src/
Patching src/a_dir/sub/foo.txt
-- old is everywhere, old is old
++ new is everywhere, new is new
Patching src/top.txt
-- old is nice
++ new is nice
Would perform 2 replacements on 2 matching files.
Re-run ruplacer with --go to write these changes to disk
Note
This project was originally hosted on the TankerHQ GitHub organization, which was my employer from 2016 to 2021. They kindly agreed to give me back ownership of this project. Thanks!
Installing with cargo
Install rust
and cargo
, for example with rustup.
Then run:
cargo install ruplacer
Alternative installation methods
-
Pre-compiled binaries for Linux, macOS, and Windows are available as assets of the latest release.
-
ruplacer
can also be installed fromhomebrew
:
brew install TankerHQ/homebrew-repo/ruplacer
ruplacer
is also on the Arch Linux User Repository
Basic usage
ruplacer pattern replacement [path]
If the path is not given, it defaults to the current working directory.
Ruplacer will then walk through every file in <path>
while honoring .gitignore
files found on the way.
Binary files and text files containing non-UTF8 characters will be skipped. Then for every remaining file, it will read the contents, replace all lines matching the pattern by the replacement, and print the difference.
If you are OK with the replacements, re-run ruplacer
with the --go
option to actually write the changes to disk.
Regex
By default, pattern
will be compiled into a Rust regex.
Note that it's slightly different from Perl-style regular expressions. Also, you must use $1
, $2
to reference
groups captured from pattern
inside replacement
.
For instance, this replaces 'last, first' by 'first last':
ruplacer '(\w+), (\w+)' '$2 $1'
(note the use of single quotes to avoid any processing by the shell)
If you don't want the pattern to be used as a regex, use the --no-regex
command line flag.
This makes it possible to look for special characters without escaping them:
# This is a regex that matches the letter a
# or the letter o
$ ruplacer '(a|o)' u
- tata toto
+ tutu tutu
- (a|o)
+ (u|u)
# This is the literal string: '(a|o)'
$ ruplacer --no-regex '(a|o)' u
# or
$ ruplacer '\(a\|o|)' u
- (a|o)
+ u
Preserving case while replacing
Ruplacer has a --preserve-case
option which works across a variety of case styles (lower case, snake case, and so on):
$ ruplacer --preserve-case foo_bar spam_eggs
Patching src/foo.txt
-- foo_bar, FooBar, and FOO_BAR!
++ spam_eggs, SpamEggs, and SPAM_EGGS!
Filter files by type or glob patterns
Inspired by ripgrep, you can also select or ignore certain "file types" or glob patterns:
# Select only C++ files
$ ruplacer old new --type cpp
# Select only *.foo files
$ ruplacer old new --type *.foo
# Select only files that match foo*bar.c
$ ruplacer old new --type foo*bar.c
# Ignore all js files
$ ruplacer old new --type-not js
# Ignore all *.bar files
$ ruplacer old new --type-not *.bar
# Ignore all files that match foo*bar.c
$ ruplacer old new --type-not foo*bar.c
Each "file type" is just a list of glob pattern. For instance: the cpp
file type matches *.C
, *.H
, *.cc
, *.cpp
and so on ...
You can see the whole list by using ruplacer --type-list
.
Dependencies
~5–18MB
~172K SLoC