问题
I want to parse strings similar to the following into separate variables using regular expressions from within Bash:
Category: entity;scheme="http://schemas.ogf.org/occi/core#";class="kind";title="Entity";attributes="occi.core.id occi.core.title";
or
Category: resource;scheme="http://schemas.ogf.org/occi/core#";class="kind";title="Resource";rel="http://schemas.ogf.org/occi/core#entity";attributes="occi.core.summary";
The first part before "title" is common to all strings, the parts title and attributes are optional.
I managed to extract the mandatory parameters common to all strings, but I have trouble with optional parameters not necessarily present for all strings. As far as I found out, Bash doesn't support Non-capturing parentheses which I would use for this purpose.
Here is what I achieved thus far:
CATEGORY_REGEX='Category:\s*([^;]*);scheme="([^"]*)";class="([^"]*)";'
category_string='Category: entity;scheme="http://schemas.ogf.org/occi/core#";class="kind";title="Entity";attributes="occi.core.id occi.core.title";'
[[ $category_string =~ $CATEGORY_REGEX ]]
echo ${BASH_REMATCH[0]}
echo ${BASH_REMATCH[1]}
echo ${BASH_REMATCH[2]}
echo ${BASH_REMATCH[3]}
The regular expression I would like to use (and which is working for me in Ruby) would be:
CATEGORY_REGEX='Category:\s*([^;]*);\s*scheme="([^"]*)";\s*class="([^"]*)";\s*(?:title="([^"]*)";)?\s*(?:rel="([^"]*)";)?\s*(?:location="([^"]*)";)?\s*(?:attributes="([^"]*)";)?\s*(?:actions="([^"]*)";)?'
Is there any other solution to parse the string with command line tools without having to fall back on perl, python or ruby?
回答1:
I don't think non-capturing groups exist in bash regex, so your options are to use a scripting language or to remove the ?:
from all of the (?:...)
groups and just be careful about which groups you reference, for example:
CATEGORY_REGEX='Category:\s*([^;]*);\s*scheme="([^"]*)";\s*class="([^"]*)";\s*(title="([^"]*)";)?\s*(rel="([^"]*)";)?\s*(location="([^"]*)";)?\s*(attributes="([^"]*)";)?\s*(actions="([^"]*)";)?'
category_string='Category: entity;scheme="http://schemas.ogf.org/occi/core#";class="kind";title="Entity";attributes="occi.core.id occi.core.title";'
[[ $category_string =~ $CATEGORY_REGEX ]]
echo "full: ${BASH_REMATCH[0]}"
echo "category: ${BASH_REMATCH[1]}"
echo "scheme: ${BASH_REMATCH[2]}"
echo "class: ${BASH_REMATCH[3]}"
echo "title: ${BASH_REMATCH[5]}"
echo "rel: ${BASH_REMATCH[7]}"
echo "location: ${BASH_REMATCH[9]}"
echo "attributes: ${BASH_REMATCH[11]}"
echo "actions: ${BASH_REMATCH[13]}"
Note that starting with the optional parameters we need to skip a group each time, because the even numbered groups from 4 on contain the parameter name as well as the value (if the parameter is present).
回答2:
You can emulate non-matching groups in bash using a little bit of regexp magic:
_2__ _4__ _5__
[[ "fu@k" =~ ((.+)@|)((.+)/|)(.+) ]];
echo "${BASH_REMATCH[2]:--} ${BASH_REMATCH[4]:--} ${BASH_REMATCH[5]:--}"
# Output: fu - k
Characters @
and /
are parts of string we parse.
Regexp pipe |
is used for either left or right (empty) part matching.
For curious, ${VAR:-<default value>}
is variable expansion with default value in case $VAR is empty.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8718851/matching-optional-parameters-with-non-capturing-groups-in-bash-regular-expressio