I often find myself doing something like this a lot:
something | grep cat | grep bat | grep rat
when all I recall is that those three words must have occurred somewhere, in some order, in the output of something…Now, i could do something like this:
something | grep '.*cat.*bat.*rat.*'
but that implies ordering (bat appears after cat). As such, I was thinking of adding a bash function to my environment called mgrep which would turn:
mgrep cat bat rat
into
grep cat | grep bat | grep rat
but I’m not quite sure how to do it (or whether there is an alternative?). One idea would be to for loop over the parameters like so:
while (($#)); do
grep $1 some_thing > some_thing
shift
done
cat some_thing
where some_thing is possibly some fifo like when one does >(cmd) in bash but I’m not sure. How would one proceed?
I believe you could generate a pipeline one command at a time, by redirecting stdin at each step. But it’s much simpler and cleaner to generate your pipeline as a string and execute it with eval, like this:
This will generate a pipeline of greps that always reads from standard input, as in your model. Note that it protects spaces in quoted arguments, so that it works correctly if you write: