# rga - ripgrep, but also search in PDFs, E-Books, Office documents, zip, tar.gz, etc rga is a line-oriented search tool that allows you to look for a regex in a multitude of file types. It is a wrapper around the awesome [ripgrep] that enables it to search in pdf, docx, pptx, movie subtitles (mkv, mp4), sqlite, etc. [![Linux build status](https://api.travis-ci.org/phiresky/ripgrep_all.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/phiresky/ripgrep_all) [![Crates.io](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/ripgrep_all.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/ripgrep_all) ## Future Work - I wanted to add a photograph adapter (based on object classification / detection) for fun, based on something . It worked with [YOLO](https://pjreddie.com/darknet/yolo/), but something more useful and state-of-the art [like this](https://github.com/aimagelab/show-control-and-tell) proved very hard to integrate. - 7z adapter (couldn't find a nice to use Rust library) - allow per-adapter configuration options (probably via env (RGA_ADAPTER_CONF=json)) - there's some more (mostly technical) todos in the code ## Examples Say you have a large folder of papers or lecture slides, and you can't remember which one of them mentioned `LSTM`s. With rga, you can just run this: ``` rga "LSTM|GRU" collection/ [results] ``` and it will recursively find a regex in pdfs and pptx slides, including if some of them are zipped up. You can do mostly the same thing with [`pdfgrep -r`][pdfgrep], but it will be much slower and you will miss content in other file types. ```barchart title: Searching in 20 pdfs with 100 slides each subtitle: lower is better data: - pdfgrep: 123s - rga (first run): 10.3s - rga (subsequent runs): 0.1s ``` On the first run rga is mostly faster because of multithreading, but on subsequent runs (on the same files but with any query) rga will cache the text extraction because pdf parsing is slow. ## Setup rga should compile with stable Rust. To install it, simply run (your OSes equivalent of) ```bash apt install build-essential pandoc poppler-utils ffmpeg cargo install ripgrep_all rga --help # works! :) ``` You don't necessarily need to install any dependencies, but then you will see an error when trying to read from the corresponding file type (e.g. poppler-utils for pdf). ## Technical details `rga` simply runs ripgrep (`rg`) with some options set, especially `--pre=rga-preproc` and `--pre-glob`. `rga-preproc [fname]` will match an "adapter" to the given file based on either it's filename or it's mime type (if `--accurate` is given). You can see all adapters currently included in [src/adapters](src/adapters). Some rga adapters run external binaries to do the actual work (such as pandoc or ffmpeg), usually by writing to stdin and reading from stdout. Most adapters read the files from a [Read](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Read.html), so they work completely on streamed data (that can come from anywhere including within nested archives). rga-preproc writes ## Development To enable debug logging: ```bash export RUST_LOG=debug export RUST_BACKTRACE=1 ``` Also rember to disable caching with `--rga-no-cache` or clear the cache in `~/.cache/rga` to debug the adapters. # Similar tools - [pdfgrep][pdfgrep] - [this gist](https://gist.github.com/phiresky/5025490526ba70663ab3b8af6c40a8db) has my proof of concept version of a caching extractor to use ripgrep as a replacement for pdfgrep. - [this gist](https://gist.github.com/ColonolBuendia/314826e37ec35c616d70506c38dc65aa) is a more extensive preprocessing script by [@ColonolBuendia](https://github.com/ColonolBuendia) [pdfgrep]: https://pdfgrep.org/ [ripgrep]: https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep