This file documents rgrep, a recursive, highlighting grep program. Currently, rgrep is only available on Unix systems. To build it, move to the src directory for JED and enter: `make rgrep'. Why use rgrep instead of more traditional Unix tools? ------------------------------------------------------ Unlike grep and egrep, rgrep has the ability to recursively descend directories. The traditional way of performing this kind of search on Unix systems utilizes the `find' command in conjunction with `grep'. However, this results in very poor performance. Consider the tradional approach where one wants to search the /usr/include directory for the string `FD_SET': For this, one would use: % find /usr/include -exec grep -l FD_SET \{\} \; -print Ignoring the fact that the above expression looks complex, it failed to find any occurence of FD_SET under the /usr/include directory of my Ultrix system. Now, if rgrep is used, one types: % rgrep -lFr FD_SET /usr/include which yielded: /usr/include/sys/types.h The reason that `find' failed is that /usr/include/sys is a symbolic link to /sys/h. `rgrep' was able to succeed because of the `-F' flag which telles it to follow links. I looked in the man page for a similar option for `find' but nothing turned up.