Provided by: hxtools_20231224-2ubuntu1_amd64
Name
pesubst — perl-regexp stream substitution
Syntax
pesubst [-f] [-s pattern] [-d pattern] [-m modifiers] file...
Description
pesubst can substitute strings in streams and files, and does so by using the Perl engine. It obsoletes sed(1) for simple substitution tasks.
Options
-f Fill the replacement string with NULs to bring it up to the size of the original string. -s pattern Source pattern to search for in files. This can be any valid Perl regular expression. Files are slurped in as a whole, so matching across newlines should be no problem (with the -ms flag). -d pattern Destination (replacement) string. This can be any valid string Perl accepts. For details see the perlre(1) manpage. -m modifiers A string of modifiers to apply to the regex. See below.
Modifiers
e Evaluate the right side as an expression. g Replace globally, i.e., all occurrences. This is always enabled in pesubst. i Do case-insensitive pattern matching. m Treat string as multiple lines. That is, change "^" and "$" from matching the start or end of the string to matching the start or end of any line anywhere within the string. o Compile pattern only once. s Treat string as single line. That is, change "." to match any character whatsoever, even a newline, which normally it would not match. x Extend your pattern's legibility by permitting whitespace and comments.
Examples
Change all occurrences of foo (case-insensitive) to bar: pesubst -s foo -d bar -ms myfile Change all Shell-style comments into C++ ones: pesubst -s '^#' -d // -mm myfile Using both the "m" and "i" flags: pesubst -s '^#INCLUDE\s+' -d '#include ' -mmi myfile.c
See also
hxtools(7), pegrep(1)