In my home directory I have a folder drupal-6.14 that contains the Drupal platform.
From this directory I use the following command:
find drupal-6.14 -type f -iname '*' | grep -P 'drupal-6.14/(?!sites(?!/all|/default)).*' | xargs tar -czf drupal-6.14.tar.gz
What this command does is gzips the folder drupal-6.14, excluding all subfolders of drupal-6.14/sites/ except sites/all and sites/default, which it includes.
My question is on the regular expression:
grep -P 'drupal-6.14/(?!sites(?!/all|/default)).*'
The expression works to exclude all the folders I want excluded, but I don't quite understand why.
It is a common task using regular expressions to
Match all strings, except those that don't contain subpattern x. Or in other words, negating a subpattern.
I (think) I understand that the general strategy to solve these problems is the use of negative lookaheads, but I've never understood to a satisfactory level how positive and negative look(ahead/behind)s work.
Over the years, I've read many websites on them. The PHP and Python regex manuals, other pages like http://www.regular-expressions.info/lookaround.html and so forth, but I've never really had a solid understanding of them.
Could someone explain, how this is working, and perhaps provide some similar examples that would do similar things?
-- Update One:
Regarding Andomar's response: can a double negative lookahead be more succinctly expressed as a single positive lookahead statement:
i.e Is:
'drupal-6.14/(?!sites(?!/all|/default)).*'
equivalent to:
'drupal-6.14/(?=sites(?:/all|/default)).*'
???
-- Update Two:
As per @andomar and @alan moore - you can't interchange double negative lookahead for positive lookahead.
A negative lookahead says, at this position, the following regex can not match.
Let's take a simplified example:
a(?!b(?!c))
a Match: (?!b) succeeds
ac Match: (?!b) succeeds
ab No match: (?!b(?!c)) fails
abe No match: (?!b(?!c)) fails
abc Match: (?!b(?!c)) succeeds
The last example is a double negation: it allows a b
followed by c
. The nested negative lookahead becomes a positive lookahead: the c
should be present.
In each example, only the a
is matched. The lookahead is only a condition, and does not add to the matched text.