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Output Formats, Fields and Filters

Drush utilizes a powerful formatting and filtering system that provides the user with a lot of control over how output from various commands is rendered.

  • Output formats may be used to select the data type used to print the output. For example, many commands allow the user to select between a human-readable table, or various machine-parsable formats such as yaml and json.
  • Output fields may be used to select and order the data columns.
  • Output filters may be used to limit which data rows are printed based on logical expressions.

Output Formats

The --format option may be used to select the data format used to print the output of a command. Most commands that produce informative output about some object or system can transform their data into different formats. For example, the version command may be printed in a human-readable table (the default), or in a json array:

$ drush version
 Drush version : 10.3.1
$ drush version --format=json
{
    "drush-version": "10.3.1"
}
The available output formats are shown in the help for each command:
$ drush help version
Show drush version.

Options:
 --format=<json>    Select output format. Available: json, string, var_export, yaml. Default is key-value.

Output Fields

If you wish to limit the number of columns produced by a command, use the --fields option. List the field names in the order they should be displayed:

$ drush views:list --fields=machine-name,status
+-------------------+----------+
| Machine name      | Status   |
+-------------------+----------+
| block_content     | Enabled  |
| comment           | Enabled  |
| comments_recent   | Enabled  |
| content           | Enabled  |
| content_recent    | Enabled  |
| files             | Enabled  |
| frontpage         | Enabled  |
| taxonomy_term     | Enabled  |
| user_admin_people | Enabled  |
| watchdog          | Enabled  |
| who_s_new         | Enabled  |
| who_s_online      | Enabled  |
| archive           | Disabled |
| glossary          | Disabled |
+-------------------+----------+
The available field names are shown in the help text:
$ drush help views:list
Get a list of all views in the system.

Options:
  --fields=FIELDS   Available fields: Machine name (machine-name),     
                    Name (label), Description (description), Status    
                    (status), Tag (tag) [default:                      
                    "machine-name,label,description,status"]           
Fields may be named either using their human-readable name, or via their machine name.

Note also that some commands do not display all of their available data columns by default. To show all available fields, use --fields=*

There is also a singular form --field available. If this form is used, it will also force the output format to string.

$ drush views:list --field=machine-name 
block_content
comment
comments_recent
content
content_recent
files
frontpage
taxonomy_term
user_admin_people
watchdog
who_s_new
who_s_online
archive
glossary

Output Filters

A number of Drush commands that output tabular data support a --filter option that allows rows from the output to be selected with simple logic expressions.

In its simplest form, the --filter option takes a string that indicates the value to filter by in the command's default filter field. For example, the role:list command specifies perms as its default filter; the output of the role:list command may be limited to only those roles that have a specified permission:

$ drush role:list --filter='post comments'
authenticated:
  label: 'Authenticated user'
  perms:
    - 'access comments'
    - 'access content'
    - 'access shortcuts'
    - 'access site-wide contact form'
    - 'access user contact forms'
    - 'post comments'
    - 'search content'
    - 'skip comment approval'
    - 'use text format basic_html'
Note that not all commands have a default filter field.

Other fields in the output may be searched by using a simple expression in the --filter term. For example, to list only the enabled extensions with the pm:list command, you could run:

$ drush pm:list --filter='status=enabled'
To search for fields that contain a string using the operator *=, or match a regular expression with the ~= operator. For example, to find all views whose machine name contains the word content:
drush views:list --filter='machine-name*=content'
To use a regular expression to find any core requirement notice whose title contains either php or gd
drush core:requirements --filter='title~=#(php|gd)#i'
Finally, filter expressions may also use logical-and (&&) or logical-or (||) operations to separate multiple terms. Parenthesis are not supported. For example, to search both the title and severity fields in the core:requirements command:
drush core:requirements --filter='title~=#(php|gd)#i&&severity=warning'

The = and *= operators always use case-insensitive comparisons. The ~= operator is case-sensitive, unless the i PCRE modifier is used, as shown in the previous example.

Comparison of Filters with Grep

Using the --filter feature is similar to using grep. The main difference is that the filter feature does a semantic search, which is to say that it explicitly compares against the data in specific fields. In comparison, the grep command does a line-based search.

Show only results where the severity is warning:

drush core:requirements --filter='severity=warning'

Show only lines that contain the string warning (either in the severity field, or somewhere else on the line):

drush core:requirements | grep -i warning

The table below compares and contrasts the two ways of searching.

Feature --filter grep
Regular expressions Yes, with ~= Yes
Word-wrapped field data Searched correctly Might cause false negative
Search just one field Yes Might get false positives
Search multiple fields Yes, with ||/&& Yes (line-based searching)
Searching hides header No Yes (unless it matches)

Last update: February 6, 2021