grep (3.8-3) unstable; urgency=low To temporarily workaround some issues with the debian building and ci infrastructure, this Debian grep release temporarily disables the stray backlash warning. Upstream behaviour can be enabled back again by setting the DEB_GREP_ENABLE_STRAY_BACKSLASH_WARN envvar. Since regular expressions with stray backslashes could lead to unexpected results, the patch applied in this release will be reverted in the future. -- Santiago Ruano Rincón Tue, 25 Oct 2022 17:55:14 +0200 grep (3.8-2) unstable; urgency=low This Debian grep release removes the deprecation warning about egrep and fgrep. These alternative programs will be still shipped by Debian. Although, for portability reasons, users are encouraged to use grep with the concerned options instead of those alternative programs. -- Santiago Ruano Rincón Mon, 12 Sep 2022 15:47:11 +0200 grep (3.8-1) unstable; urgency=low From upstream's NEWS: The egrep and fgrep commands, which have been deprecated since release 2.5.3 (2007), now warn that they are obsolescent and should be replaced by grep -E and grep -F. To follow upstream's behaviour, the Debian-specific rgrep command is obsolescent. For the moment, it is just no longer documeted. More upstream NEWS: The confusing GREP_COLOR environment variable is now obsolescent. Instead of GREP_COLOR='xxx', use GREP_COLORS='mt=xxx'. grep now warns if GREP_COLOR is used and is not overridden by GREP_COLORS. Also, grep now treats GREP_COLOR like GREP_COLORS by silently ignoring it if it attempts to inject ANSI terminal escapes. Regular expressions with stray backslashes now cause warnings, as their unspecified behavior can lead to unexpected results. For example, '\a' and 'a' are not always equivalent . Similarly, regular expressions or subexpressions that start with a repetition operator now also cause warnings due to their unspecified behavior; for example, *a(+b|{1}c) now has three reasons to warn. The warnings are intended as a transition aid; they are likely to be errors in future releases. Regular expressions like [:space:] are now errors even if POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, since POSIX now allows the GNU behavior. -- Santiago Ruano Rincón Tue, 06 Sep 2022 15:29:49 +0200 grep (3.6-1) unstable; urgency=low From upstream's NEWS: The GREP_OPTIONS environment variable no longer affects grep's behavior. The variable was declared obsolescent in grep 2.21 (2014), and since then any use had caused grep to issue a diagnostic. -- Santiago Ruano Rincón Mon, 09 Nov 2020 10:57:22 +0100