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grep

April 7, 2019 by blogadmin

grep(1) – Linux man page

Name

grep, egrep, fgrep – print lines matching a pattern

Synopsis

grep [OPTIONS] PATTERN [FILE…]
grep
[OPTIONS] [-e PATTERN | -f FILE] [FILE…]

Description

grep searches the named input FILEs (or standard input if no files are named, or if a single hyphen-minus (–) is given as file name) for lines containing a match to the given PATTERN. By default, grep prints the matching lines.

In addition, two variant programs egrep and fgrep are available. egrep is the same as grep -E. fgrep is the same as grep -F. Direct invocation as either egrep or fgrep is deprecated, but is provided to allow historical applications that rely on them to run unmodified.

Options

Generic Program Information

–helpPrint a usage message briefly summarizing these command-line options and the bug-reporting address, then exit.
-V, –version
Print the version number of grep to the standard output stream. This version number should be included in all bug reports (see below).

Matcher Selection

-E, –extended-regexp
Interpret PATTERN as an extended regular expression (ERE, see below). (-E is specified by POSIX .)
-F, –fixed-strings
Interpret PATTERN as a list of fixed strings, separated by newlines, any of which is to be matched. (-F is specified by POSIX .)
-G, –basic-regexp
Interpret PATTERN as a basic regular expression (BRE, see below). This is the default.
-P, –perl-regexp
Interpret PATTERN as a Perl regular expression. This is highly experimental and grep -P may warn of unimplemented features.

Matching Control

-e PATTERN, –regexp=PATTERN
Use PATTERN as the pattern. This can be used to specify multiple search patterns, or to protect a pattern beginning with a hyphen (–). (-e is specified by POSIX .)
-f FILE, –file=FILE
Obtain patterns from FILE, one per line. The empty file contains zero patterns, and therefore matches nothing. (-f is specified by POSIX .)
-i, –ignore-case
Ignore case distinctions in both the PATTERN and the input files. (-i is specified by POSIX .)
-v, –invert-match
Invert the sense of matching, to select non-matching lines. (-v is specified by POSIX .)
-w, –word-regexp
Select only those lines containing matches that form whole words. The test is that the matching substring must either be at the beginning of the line, or preceded by a non-word constituent character. Similarly, it must be either at the end of the line or followed by a non-word constituent character. Word-constituent characters are letters, digits, and the underscore.
-x, –line-regexp
Select only those matches that exactly match the whole line. (-x is specified by POSIX .)
-yObsolete synonym for -i.

General Output Control

-c, –count
Suppress normal output; instead print a count of matching lines for each input file. With the -v, –invert-match option (see below), count non-matching lines. (-c is specified by POSIX .)
–color[=WHEN], –colour[=WHEN]
Surround the matched (non-empty) strings, matching lines, context lines, file names, line numbers, byte offsets, and separators (for fields and groups of context lines) with escape sequences to display them in color on the terminal. The colors are defined by the environment variable GREP_COLORS. The deprecated environment variable GREP_COLOR is still supported, but its setting does not have priority. WHEN is never, always, or auto.
-L, –files-without-match
Suppress normal output; instead print the name of each input file from which no output would normally have been printed. The scanning will stop on the first match.
-l, –files-with-matches
Suppress normal output; instead print the name of each input file from which output would normally have been printed. The scanning will stop on the first match. (-l is specified by POSIX .)
-m NUM, –max-count=NUM
Stop reading a file after NUM matching lines. If the input is standard input from a regular file, and NUM matching lines are output, grep ensures that the standard input is positioned to just after the last matching line before exiting, regardless of the presence of trailing context lines. This enables a calling process to resume a search. When grep stops after NUM matching lines, it outputs any trailing context lines. When the -c or –count option is also used, grep does not output a count greater than NUM. When the -v or –invert-match option is also used, grep stops after outputting NUM non-matching lines.
-o, –only-matching
Print only the matched (non-empty) parts of a matching line, with each such part on a separate output line.
-q, –quiet, –silent
Quiet; do not write anything to standard output. Exit immediately with zero status if any match is found, even if an error was detected. Also see the -s or –no-messages option. (-q is specified by POSIX .)
-s, –no-messages
Suppress error messages about nonexistent or unreadable files. Portability note: unlike GNU grep, 7th Edition Unix grep did not conform to POSIX , because it lacked -q and its -s option behaved like GNU grep‘s -q option. USG -style grep also lacked -q but its -s option behaved like GNU grep. Portable shell scripts should avoid both -q and -s and should redirect standard and error output to /dev/null instead. (-s is specified by POSIX .)

Output Line Prefix Control

-b, –byte-offset
Print the 0-based byte offset within the input file before each line of output. If -o (–only-matching) is specified, print the offset of the matching part itself.
-H, –with-filename
Print the file name for each match. This is the default when there is more than one file to search.
-h, –no-filename
Suppress the prefixing of file names on output. This is the default when there is only one file (or only standard input) to search.
–label=LABEL
Display input actually coming from standard input as input coming from file LABEL. This is especially useful when implementing tools like zgrep, e.g., gzip -cd foo.gz | grep –label=foo -H something. See also the -H option.
-n, –line-number
Prefix each line of output with the 1-based line number within its input file. (-n is specified by POSIX .)
-T, –initial-tab
Make sure that the first character of actual line content lies on a tab stop, so that the alignment of tabs looks normal. This is useful with options that prefix their output to the actual content: -H,-n, and -b. In order to improve the probability that lines from a single file will all start at the same column, this also causes the line number and byte offset (if present) to be printed in a minimum size field width.
-u, –unix-byte-offsets
Report Unix-style byte offsets. This switch causes grep to report byte offsets as if the file were a Unix-style text file, i.e., with CR characters stripped off. This will produce results identical to running grep on a Unix machine. This option has no effect unless -b option is also used; it has no effect on platforms other than MS-DOS and MS -Windows.
-Z, –null
Output a zero byte (the ASCII NUL character) instead of the character that normally follows a file name. For example, grep -lZ outputs a zero byte after each file name instead of the usual newline. This option makes the output unambiguous, even in the presence of file names containing unusual characters like newlines. This option can be used with commands like find -print0, perl -0, sort -z, and xargs -0 to process arbitrary file names, even those that contain newline characters.

Context Line Control

-A NUM, –after-context=NUM
Print NUM lines of trailing context after matching lines. Places a line containing a group separator (—) between contiguous groups of matches. With the -o or –only-matching option, this has no effect and a warning is given.
-B NUM, –before-context=NUM
Print NUM lines of leading context before matching lines. Places a line containing a group separator (—) between contiguous groups of matches. With the -o or –only-matching option, this has no effect and a warning is given.
-C NUM, –NUM, –context=NUM
Print NUM lines of output context. Places a line containing a group separator (—) between contiguous groups of matches. With the -o or –only-matching option, this has no effect and a warning is given.

File and Directory Selection

-a, –text
Process a binary file as if it were text; this is equivalent to the –binary-files=text option.
–binary-files=TYPE
If the first few bytes of a file indicate that the file contains binary data, assume that the file is of type TYPE. By default, TYPE is binary, and grep normally outputs either a one-line message saying that a binary file matches, or no message if there is no match. If TYPE is without-match, grep assumes that a binary file does not match; this is equivalent to the -I option. If TYPE is text, grep processes a binary file as if it were text; this is equivalent to the -a option. Warning: grep –binary-files=text might output binary garbage, which can have nasty side effects if the output is a terminal and if the terminal driver interprets some of it as commands.
-D ACTION, –devices=ACTION
If an input file is a device, FIFO or socket, use ACTION to process it. By default, ACTION is read, which means that devices are read just as if they were ordinary files. If ACTION is skip, devices are silently skipped.
-d ACTION, –directories=ACTION
If an input file is a directory, use ACTION to process it. By default, ACTION is read, which means that directories are read just as if they were ordinary files. If ACTION is skip, directories are silently skipped. If ACTION is recurse, grep reads all files under each directory, recursively; this is equivalent to the -r option.
–exclude=GLOB
Skip files whose base name matches GLOB (using wildcard matching). A file-name glob can use *, ?, and […] as wildcards, and \ to quote a wildcard or backslash character literally.
–exclude-from=FILE
Skip files whose base name matches any of the file-name globs read from FILE (using wildcard matching as described under –exclude).
–exclude-dir=DIR
Exclude directories matching the pattern DIR from recursive searches.
-IProcess a binary file as if it did not contain matching data; this is equivalent to the –binary-files=without-match option.
–include=GLOB
Search only files whose base name matches GLOB (using wildcard matching as described under –exclude).
-R, -r, –recursive
Read all files under each directory, recursively; this is equivalent to the -d recurse option.

Other Options

–line-buffered
Use line buffering on output. This can cause a performance penalty.
–mmapIf possible, use the mmap(2) system call to read input, instead of the default read(2) system call. In some situations, –mmap yields better performance. However, –mmap can cause undefined behavior (including core dumps) if an input file shrinks while grep is operating, or if an I/O error occurs.
-U, –binary
Treat the file(s) as binary. By default, under MS-DOS and MS -Windows, grep guesses the file type by looking at the contents of the first 32KB read from the file. If grep decides the file is a text file, it strips the CR characters from the original file contents (to make regular expressions with ^ and $ work correctly). Specifying -U overrules this guesswork, causing all files to be read and passed to the matching mechanism verbatim; if the file is a text file with CR/LF pairs at the end of each line, this will cause some regular expressions to fail. This option has no effect on platforms other than MS-DOS and MS -Windows.
-z, –null-data
Treat the input as a set of lines, each terminated by a zero byte (the ASCII NUL character) instead of a newline. Like the -Z or –null option, this option can be used with commands like sort -z to process arbitrary file names.

Regular Expressions

A regular expression is a pattern that describes a set of strings. Regular expressions are constructed analogously to arithmetic expressions, by using various operators to combine smaller expressions.

grep understands three different versions of regular expression syntax: “basic,” “extended” and “perl.” In GNU grep, there is no difference in available functionality between basic and extended syntaxes. In other implementations, basic regular expressions are less powerful. The following description applies to extended regular expressions; differences for basic regular expressions are summarized afterwards. Perl regular expressions give additional functionality, and are documented in pcresyntax(3) and pcrepattern(3), but may not be available on every system.

The fundamental building blocks are the regular expressions that match a single character. Most characters, including all letters and digits, are regular expressions that match themselves. Any meta-character with special meaning may be quoted by preceding it with a backslash.

The period . matches any single character.

Character Classes and Bracket Expressions

A bracket expression is a list of characters enclosed by [ and ]. It matches any single character in that list; if the first character of the list is the caret ^ then it matches any character not in the list. For example, the regular expression [0123456789] matches any single digit.Within a bracket expression, a range expression consists of two characters separated by a hyphen. It matches any single character that sorts between the two characters, inclusive, using the locale’s collating sequence and character set. For example, in the default C locale, [a-d] is equivalent to [abcd]. Many locales sort characters in dictionary order, and in these locales [a-d] is typically not equivalent to [abcd]; it might be equivalent to [aBbCcDd], for example. To obtain the traditional interpretation of bracket expressions, you can use the C locale by setting the LC_ALL environment variable to the value C.Finally, certain named classes of characters are predefined within bracket expressions, as follows. Their names are self explanatory, and they are [:alnum:], [:alpha:], [:cntrl:], [:digit:], [:graph:], [:lower:], [:print:], [:punct:], [:space:], [:upper:], and [:xdigit:]. For example, [[:alnum:]] means [0-9A-Za-z], except the latter form depends upon the C locale and the ASCII character encoding, whereas the former is independent of locale and character set. (Note that the brackets in these class names are part of the symbolic names, and must be included in addition to the brackets delimiting the bracket expression.) Most meta-characters lose their special meaning inside bracket expressions. To include a literal ] place it first in the list. Similarly, to include a literal ^ place it anywhere but first. Finally, to include a literal – place it last.

Anchoring

The caret ^ and the dollar sign $ are meta-characters that respectively match the empty string at the beginning and end of a line.

The Backslash Character and Special Expressions

The symbols \< and \> respectively match the empty string at the beginning and end of a word. The symbol \b matches the empty string at the edge of a word, and \B matches the empty string provided it’s not at the edge of a word. The symbol \w is a synonym for [[:alnum:]] and \W is a synonym for [^[:alnum:]].

Repetition

A regular expression may be followed by one of several repetition operators:
?The preceding item is optional and matched at most once.*

The preceding item will be matched zero or more times.

+

The preceding item will be matched one or more times.

{n}

The preceding item is matched exactly n times.

{n,}

The preceding item is matched n or more times.

{,m}

The preceding item is matched at most m times.

{n,m}

The preceding item is matched at least n times, but not more than m times.

Concatenation

Two regular expressions may be concatenated; the resulting regular expression matches any string formed by concatenating two substrings that respectively match the concatenated expressions.

Alternation

Two regular expressions may be joined by the infix operator |; the resulting regular expression matches any string matching either alternate expression.

Precedence

Repetition takes precedence over concatenation, which in turn takes precedence over alternation. A whole expression may be enclosed in parentheses to override these precedence rules and form a subexpression.

Back References and Subexpressions

The back-reference \n, where n is a single digit, matches the substring previously matched by the nth parenthesized subexpression of the regular expression.

Basic vs Extended Regular Expressions

In basic regular expressions the meta-characters ?, +, {, |, (, and ) lose their special meaning; instead use the backslashed versions \?, \+, \{, \|, \(, and \).Traditional egrep did not support the { meta-character, and some egrep implementations support \{ instead, so portable scripts should avoid { in grep -E patterns and should use [{] to match a literal {.GNU grep -E attempts to support traditional usage by assuming that { is not special if it would be the start of an invalid interval specification. For example, the command grep -E ‘{1’ searches for the two-character string {1 instead of reporting a syntax error in the regular expression. POSIX.2 allows this behavior as an extension, but portable scripts should avoid it.

Environment Variables

The behavior of grep is affected by the following environment variables.

The locale for category LC_foo is specified by examining the three environment variables LC_ALL, LC_foo, LANG, in that order. The first of these variables that is set specifies the locale. For example, if LC_ALL is not set, but LC_MESSAGES is set to pt_BR, then the Brazilian Portuguese locale is used for the LC_MESSAGES category. The C locale is used if none of these environment variables are set, if the locale catalog is not installed, or if grep was not compiled with national language support ( NLS ).

GREP_OPTIONS
This variable specifies default options to be placed in front of any explicit options. For example, if GREP_OPTIONS is ‘–binary-files=without-match –directories=skip’, grep behaves as if the two options –binary-files=without-match and –directories=skip had been specified before any explicit options. Option specifications are separated by whitespace. A backslash escapes the next character, so it can be used to specify an option containing whitespace or a backslash.
GREP_COLOR
This variable specifies the color used to highlight matched (non-empty) text. It is deprecated in favor of GREP_COLORS, but still supported. The mt, ms, and mc capabilities of GREP_COLORS have priority over it. It can only specify the color used to highlight the matching non-empty text in any matching line (a selected line when the -v command-line option is omitted, or a context line when -v is specified). The default is 01;31, which means a bold red foreground text on the terminal’s default background.
GREP_COLORS
Specifies the colors and other attributes used to highlight various parts of the output. Its value is a colon-separated list of capabilities that defaults to ms=01;31:mc=01;31:sl=:cx=:fn=35:ln=32:bn=32:se=36 with the rv and ne boolean capabilities omitted (i.e., false). Supported capabilities are as follows.
sl=SGR substring for whole selected lines (i.e., matching lines when the -v command-line option is omitted, or non-matching lines when -v is specified). If however the boolean rv capability and the -v command-line option are both specified, it applies to context matching lines instead. The default is empty (i.e., the terminal’s default color pair).

cx=

SGR substring for whole context lines (i.e., non-matching lines when the -v command-line option is omitted, or matching lines when -v is specified). If however the boolean rv capability and the -v command-line option are both specified, it applies to selected non-matching lines instead. The default is empty (i.e., the terminal’s default color pair).

rv

Boolean value that reverses (swaps) the meanings of the sl= and cx= capabilities when the -v command-line option is specified. The default is false (i.e., the capability is omitted).

mt=01;31

SGR substring for matching non-empty text in any matching line (i.e., a selected line when the -v command-line option is omitted, or a context line when -v is specified). Setting this is equivalent to setting both ms= and mc= at once to the same value. The default is a bold red text foreground over the current line background.

ms=01;31

SGR substring for matching non-empty text in a selected line. (This is only used when the -v command-line option is omitted.) The effect of the sl= (or cx= if rv) capability remains active when this kicks in. The default is a bold red text foreground over the current line background.

mc=01;31

SGR substring for matching non-empty text in a context line. (This is only used when the -v command-line option is specified.) The effect of the cx= (or sl= if rv) capability remains active when this kicks in. The default is a bold red text foreground over the current line background.

fn=35SGR substring for file names prefixing any content line. The default is a magenta text foreground over the terminal’s default background.

ln=32

SGR substring for line numbers prefixing any content line. The default is a green text foreground over the terminal’s default background.

bn=32

SGR substring for byte offsets prefixing any content line. The default is a green text foreground over the terminal’s default background.

se=36

SGR substring for separators that are inserted between selected line fields (:), between context line fields, (–), and between groups of adjacent lines when nonzero context is specified (—). The default is a cyan text foreground over the terminal’s default background.

ne

Boolean value that prevents clearing to the end of line using Erase in Line (EL) to Right (\33[K) each time a colorized item ends. This is needed on terminals on which EL is not supported. It is otherwise useful on terminals for which the back_color_erase (bce) boolean terminfo capability does not apply, when the chosen highlight colors do not affect the background, or when EL is too slow or causes too much flicker. The default is false (i.e., the capability is omitted).

Note that boolean capabilities have no =… part. They are omitted (i.e., false) by default and become true when specified.See the Select Graphic Rendition (SGR) section in the documentation of the text terminal that is used for permitted values and their meaning as character attributes. These substring values are integers in decimal representation and can be concatenated with semicolons. grep takes care of assembling the result into a complete SGR sequence (\33[…m). Common values to concatenate include 1 for bold, 4 for underline, 5 for blink, 7 for inverse, 39 for default foreground color, 30 to 37 for foreground colors, 90 to 97 for 16-color mode foreground colors, 38;5;0 to 38;5;255 for 88-color and 256-color modes foreground colors, 49 for default background color, 40 to 47 for background colors, 100 to 107 for 16-color mode background colors, and 48;5;0 to 48;5;255 for 88-color and 256-color modes background colors.
LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE, LANG
These variables specify the locale for the LC_COLLATE category, which determines the collating sequence used to interpret range expressions like [a-z].
LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LANG
These variables specify the locale for the LC_CTYPE category, which determines the type of characters, e.g., which characters are whitespace.
LC_ALL, LC_MESSAGES, LANG
These variables specify the locale for the LC_MESSAGES category, which determines the language that grep uses for messages. The default C locale uses American English messages.
POSIXLY_CORRECT
If set, grep behaves as POSIX.2 requires; otherwise, grep behaves more like other GNU programs. POSIX.2 requires that options that follow file names must be treated as file names; by default, such options are permuted to the front of the operand list and are treated as options. Also, POSIX.2 requires that unrecognized options be diagnosed as “illegal”, but since they are not really against the law the default is to diagnose them as “invalid”. POSIXLY_CORRECT also disables _N_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_, described below.
_N_GNU_nonoption_argv_flags_
(Here N is grep‘s numeric process ID.) If the ith character of this environment variable’s value is 1, do not consider the ith operand of grep to be an option, even if it appears to be one. A shell can put this variable in the environment for each command it runs, specifying which operands are the results of file name wildcard expansion and therefore should not be treated as options. This behavior is available only with the GNU C library, and only when POSIXLY_CORRECT is not set.

Exit Status

Normally, the exit status is 0 if selected lines are found and 1 otherwise. But the exit status is 2 if an error occurred, unless the -q or –quiet or –silent option is used and a selected line is found. Note, however, that POSIX only mandates, for programs such as grep, cmp, and diff, that the exit status in case of error be greater than 1; it is therefore advisable, for the sake of portability, to use logic that tests for this general condition instead of strict equality with 2.

Copyright

Copyright 1998-2000, 2002, 2005-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Bugs

Reporting Bugs

Email bug reports to <bug-grep@gnu.org>, a mailing list whose web page is <http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-grep>. grep‘s Savannah bug tracker is located at <http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=grep>.

Known Bugs

Large repetition counts in the {n,m} construct may cause grep to use lots of memory. In addition, certain other obscure regular expressions require exponential time and space, and may cause grep to run out of memory.Back-references are very slow, and may require exponential time.

See Also

Regular Manual Pages

awk(1), cmp(1), diff(1), find(1), gzip(1), perl(1), sed(1), sort(1), xargs(1), zgrep(1), mmap(2), read(2), pcre(3), pcresyntax(3), pcrepattern(3), terminfo(5), glob(7), regex(7).

POSIX Programmer’s Manual Page

grep(1p).

TeXinfo Documentation

The full documentation for grep is maintained as a TeXinfo manual. If the info and grep programs are properly installed at your site, the command
info grep
should give you access to the complete manual.

Notes

GNU ‘s not Unix, but Unix is a beast; its plural form is Unixen.

Referenced By

bzgrep(1), flowdumper(1), fortune(6), gnome-search-tool(1), grepmail(1), ip(8), ksh93(1), look(1), makeindex(1), mirrordir(1), mksh(1), nawk(1), nget(1), pdsh(1), perlfunc(1), perlglossary(1), procmail(1), procmailex(5), procmailrc(5), procmailsc(5), quilt(1), regex(3), sudo(8), sudoers(5), tcpstat(1), trace-cmd-record(1), uwildmat(3), wildmat(3), xzgrep(1)

Filed Under: Linux, Man Pages

gawk – Man Page

April 7, 2019 by blogadmin

gawk(1) – Linux man page

Name

gawk – pattern scanning and processing language

Synopsis

gawk [ POSIX or GNU style options ] -f program-file [ — ] file …
gawk
[ POSIX or GNU style options ] [ — ] program-text file …

pgawk [ POSIX or GNU style options ] -f program-file [ — ] file …
pgawk
[ POSIX or GNU style options ] [ — ] program-text file …

Description

Gawk is the GNU Project’s implementation of the AWK programming language. It conforms to the definition of the language in the POSIX 1003.1 Standard. This version in turn is based on the description in The AWK Programming Language, by Aho, Kernighan, and Weinberger, with the additional features found in the System V Release 4 version of UNIX awk. Gawk also provides more recent Bell Laboratories awk extensions, and a number of GNU -specific extensions.

Pgawk is the profiling version of gawk. It is identical in every way to gawk, except that programs run more slowly, and it automatically produces an execution profile in the file awkprof.out when done. See the –profile option, below.

The command line consists of options to gawk itself, the AWK program text (if not supplied via the -f or –file options), and values to be made available in the ARGC and ARGV pre-defined AWK variables.

Option Format

Gawk options may be either traditional POSIX one letter options, or GNU -style long options. POSIX options start with a single “-“, while long options start with “–“. Long options are provided for both GNU -specific features and for POSIX -mandated features.

Following the POSIX standard, gawk-specific options are supplied via arguments to the -W option. Multiple -W options may be supplied Each -W option has a corresponding long option, as detailed below. Arguments to long options are either joined with the option by an = sign, with no intervening spaces, or they may be provided in the next command line argument. Long options may be abbreviated, as long as the abbreviation remains unique.

Options

Gawk accepts the following options, listed by frequency.

-F fs
–field-separator fs
Use fs for the input field separator (the value of the FS predefined variable).
-v var=val
–assign var=val
Assign the value val to the variable var, before execution of the program begins. Such variable values are available to the BEGIN block of an AWK program.
-f program-file
–file program-file
Read the AWK program source from the file program-file, instead of from the first command line argument. Multiple -f (or –file) options may be used.
-mf NNN
-mr NNN
Set various memory limits to the value NNN. The f flag sets the maximum number of fields, and the r flag sets the maximum record size. These two flags and the -m option are from an earlier version of the Bell Laboratories research version of UNIX awk. They are ignored by gawk, since gawk has no pre-defined limits. (Current versions of the Bell Laboratories awk no longer accept them.)
-O
–optimize
Enable optimizations upon the internal representation of the program. Currently, this includes just simple constant-folding. The gawk maintainer hopes to add additional optimizations over time.
-W compat
-W traditional
–compat
–traditional
Run in compatibility mode. In compatibility mode, gawk behaves identically to UNIX awk; none of the GNU -specific extensions are recognized. The use of –traditional is preferred over the other forms of this option. See GNU EXTENSIONS, below, for more information.
-W copyleft
-W copyright
–copyleft
–copyright
Print the short version of the GNU copyright information message on the standard output and exit successfully.
-W dump-variables[=file]
–dump-variables[=file]
Print a sorted list of global variables, their types and final values to file. If no file is provided, gawk uses a file named awkvars.out in the current directory.
Having a list of all the global variables is a good way to look for typographical errors in your programs. You would also use this option if you have a large program with a lot of functions, and you want to be sure that your functions don’t inadvertently use global variables that you meant to be local. (This is a particularly easy mistake to make with simple variable names like i, j, and so on.)
-W exec file
–exec file
Similar to -f, however, this is option is the last one processed. This should be used with #! scripts, particularly for CGI applications, to avoid passing in options or source code (!) on the command line from a URL. This option disables command-line variable assignments.
-W gen-po
–gen-po
Scan and parse the AWK program, and generate a GNU .po format file on standard output with entries for all localizable strings in the program. The program itself is not executed. See the GNU gettext distribution for more information on .po files.
-W help
-W usage
–help
–usage
Print a relatively short summary of the available options on the standard output. (Per the GNU Coding Standards, these options cause an immediate, successful exit.)
-W lint[=value]
–lint[=value]
Provide warnings about constructs that are dubious or non-portable to other AWK implementations. With an optional argument of fatal, lint warnings become fatal errors. This may be drastic, but its use will certainly encourage the development of cleaner AWK programs. With an optional argument of invalid, only warnings about things that are actually invalid are issued. (This is not fully implemented yet.)
-W lint-old
–lint-old
Provide warnings about constructs that are not portable to the original version of Unix awk.
-W non-decimal-data
–non-decimal-data
Recognize octal and hexadecimal values in input data. Use this option with great caution!
-W posix
–posix
This turns on compatibility mode, with the following additional restrictions:
• \x escape sequences are not recognized.• Only space and tab act as field separators when FS is set to a single space, newline does not.

• You cannot continue lines after ? and :.

• The synonym func for the keyword function is not recognized.

• The operators ** and **= cannot be used in place of ^ and ^=.

• The fflush() function is not available.

-W profile[=prof_file]
–profile[=prof_file]
Send profiling data to prof_file. The default is awkprof.out. When run with gawk, the profile is just a “pretty printed” version of the program. When run with pgawk, the profile contains execution counts of each statement in the program in the left margin and function call counts for each user-defined function.
-W re-interval
–re-interval
Enable the use of interval expressions in regular expression matching (see Regular Expressions, below). Interval expressions were not traditionally available in the AWK language. The POSIX standard added them, to make awk and egrep consistent with each other. However, their use is likely to break old AWK programs, so gawk only provides them if they are requested with this option, or when –posix is specified.
-W source program-text
–source program-text
Use program-text as AWK program source code. This option allows the easy intermixing of library functions (used via the -f and –file options) with source code entered on the command line. It is intended primarily for medium to large AWK programs used in shell scripts.
-W use-lc-numeric
–use-lc-numeric
This forces gawk to use the locale’s decimal point character when parsing input data. Although the POSIX standard requires this behavior, and gawk does so when –posix is in effect, the default is to follow traditional behavior and use a period as the decimal point, even in locales where the period is not the decimal point character. This option overrides the default behavior, without the full draconian strictness of the –posix option.
-W version
–version
Print version information for this particular copy of gawk on the standard output. This is useful mainly for knowing if the current copy of gawk on your system is up to date with respect to whatever the Free Software Foundation is distributing. This is also useful when reporting bugs. (Per the GNU Coding Standards, these options cause an immediate, successful exit.)
—Signal the end of options. This is useful to allow further arguments to the AWK program itself to start with a “-“. This provides consistency with the argument parsing convention used by most other POSIX programs.
In compatibility mode, any other options are flagged as invalid, but are otherwise ignored. In normal operation, as long as program text has been supplied, unknown options are passed on to the AWK program in the ARGV array for processing. This is particularly useful for running AWK programs via the “#!” executable interpreter mechanism.

Awk Program Execution

An AWK program consists of a sequence of pattern-action statements and optional function definitions.

pattern{ action statements }
function name(parameter list) { statements }
Gawk first reads the program source from the program-file(s) if specified, from arguments to –source, or from the first non-option argument on the command line. The -f and –source options may be used multiple times on the command line. Gawk reads the program text as if all the program-files and command line source texts had been concatenated together. This is useful for building libraries of AWK functions, without having to include them in each new AWK program that uses them. It also provides the ability to mix library functions with command line programs.The environment variable AWKPATH specifies a search path to use when finding source files named with the -f option. If this variable does not exist, the default path is “.:/usr/local/share/awk”. (The actual directory may vary, depending upon how gawk was built and installed.) If a file name given to the -f option contains a “/” character, no path search is performed.Gawk executes AWK programs in the following order. First, all variable assignments specified via the -v option are performed. Next, gawk compiles the program into an internal form. Then, gawk executes the code in the BEGIN block(s) (if any), and then proceeds to read each file named in the ARGV array. If there are no files named on the command line, gawk reads the standard input.If a filename on the command line has the form var=val it is treated as a variable assignment. The variable var will be assigned the value val. (This happens after any BEGIN block(s) have been run.) Command line variable assignment is most useful for dynamically assigning values to the variables AWK uses to control how input is broken into fields and records. It is also useful for controlling state if multiple passes are needed over a single data file.

If the value of a particular element of ARGV is empty (“”), gawk skips over it.

For each record in the input, gawk tests to see if it matches any pattern in the AWK program. For each pattern that the record matches, the associated action is executed. The patterns are tested in the order they occur in the program.

Finally, after all the input is exhausted, gawk executes the code in the END block(s) (if any).

VARIABLES, RECORDS AND FIELDS

AWK variables are dynamic; they come into existence when they are first used. Their values are either floating-point numbers or strings, or both, depending upon how they are used. AWK also has one dimensional arrays; arrays with multiple dimensions may be simulated. Several pre-defined variables are set as a program runs; these are described as needed and summarized below.

Records

Normally, records are separated by newline characters. You can control how records are separated by assigning values to the built-in variable RS. If RS is any single character, that character separates records. Otherwise, RS is a regular expression. Text in the input that matches this regular expression separates the record. However, in compatibility mode, only the first character of its string value is used for separating records. If RS is set to the null string, then records are separated by blank lines. When RS is set to the null string, the newline character always acts as a field separator, in addition to whatever value FS may have.

Fields

As each input record is read, gawk splits the record into fields, using the value of the FS variable as the field separator. If FS is a single character, fields are separated by that character. If FS is the null string, then each individual character becomes a separate field. Otherwise, FS is expected to be a full regular expression. In the special case that FS is a single space, fields are separated by runs of spaces and/or tabs and/or newlines. (But see the section POSIX COMPATIBILITY, below). NOTE: The value of IGNORECASE (see below) also affects how fields are split when FS is a regular expression, and how records are separated when RS is a regular expression.If the FIELDWIDTHS variable is set to a space separated list of numbers, each field is expected to have fixed width, and gawk splits up the record using the specified widths. The value of FS is ignored. Assigning a new value to FS overrides the use of FIELDWIDTHS, and restores the default behavior.Each field in the input record may be referenced by its position, $1, $2, and so on. $0 is the whole record. Fields need not be referenced by constants:
n = 5
print $n
prints the fifth field in the input record.The variable NF is set to the total number of fields in the input record.References to non-existent fields (i.e. fields after $NF) produce the null-string. However, assigning to a non-existent field (e.g., $(NF+2) = 5) increases the value of NF, creates any intervening fields with the null string as their value, and causes the value of $0 to be recomputed, with the fields being separated by the value of OFS. References to negative numbered fields cause a fatal error. Decrementing NF causes the values of fields past the new value to be lost, and the value of $0 to be recomputed, with the fields being separated by the value of OFS.Assigning a value to an existing field causes the whole record to be rebuilt when $0 is referenced. Similarly, assigning a value to $0 causes the record to be resplit, creating new values for the fields.

Built-in Variables

Gawk‘s built-in variables are:
ARGCThe number of command line arguments (does not include options to gawk, or the program source).ARGINDThe index in ARGV of the current file being processed.

ARGV

Array of command line arguments. The array is indexed from 0 to ARGC – 1. Dynamically changing the contents of ARGV can control the files used for data.

BINMODE

On non-POSIX systems, specifies use of “binary” mode for all file I/O. Numeric values of 1, 2, or 3, specify that input files, output files, or all files, respectively, should use binary I/O. String values of “r”, or “w” specify that input files, or output files, respectively, should use binary I/O. String values of “rw” or “wr” specify that all files should use binary I/O. Any other string value is treated as “rw”, but generates a warning message.

CONVFMT

The conversion format for numbers, “%.6g”, by default.

ENVIRON

An array containing the values of the current environment. The array is indexed by the environment variables, each element being the value of that variable (e.g., ENVIRON[“HOME”] might be /home/arnold). Changing this array does not affect the environment seen by programs which gawk spawns via redirection or the system() function.

ERRNO

If a system error occurs either doing a redirection for getline, during a read for getline, or during a close(), then ERRNO will contain a string describing the error. The value is subject to translation in non-English locales.

FIELDWIDTHS

A white-space separated list of fieldwidths. When set, gawk parses the input into fields of fixed width, instead of using the value of the FS variable as the field separator.

FILENAME

The name of the current input file. If no files are specified on the command line, the value of FILENAME is “-“. However, FILENAME is undefined inside the BEGIN block (unless set by getline).

FNR

The input record number in the current input file.

FS

The input field separator, a space by default. See Fields, above.

IGNORECASE

Controls the case-sensitivity of all regular expression and string operations. If IGNORECASE has a non-zero value, then string comparisons and pattern matching in rules, field splitting with FS, record separating with RS, regular expression matching with ~ and !~, and the gensub(), gsub(), index(), match(), split(), and sub() built-in functions all ignore case when doing regular expression operations. NOTE: Array subscripting is not affected. However, the asort() and asorti() functions are affected.

Thus, if IGNORECASE is not equal to zero, /aB/ matches all of the strings “ab”, “aB”, “Ab”, and “AB”. As with all AWK variables, the initial value of IGNORECASE is zero, so all regular expression and string operations are normally case-sensitive. Under Unix, the full ISO 8859-1 Latin-1 character set is used when ignoring case. As of gawk 3.1.4, the case equivalencies are fully locale-aware, based on the C <ctype.h> facilities such as isalpha(), and toupper().
LINTProvides dynamic control of the –lint option from within an AWK program. When true, gawk prints lint warnings. When false, it does not. When assigned the string value “fatal”, lint warnings become fatal errors, exactly like –lint=fatal. Any other true value just prints warnings.NFThe number of fields in the current input record.

NR

The total number of input records seen so far.

OFMT

The output format for numbers, “%.6g”, by default.

OFS

The output field separator, a space by default.

ORS

The output record separator, by default a newline.

PROCINFO

The elements of this array provide access to information about the running AWK program. On some systems, there may be elements in the array, “group1” through “groupn“ for some n, which is the number of supplementary groups that the process has. Use the in operator to test for these elements. The following elements are guaranteed to be available:

PROCINFO[“egid”]the value of the getegid(2) system call.

PROCINFO[“euid”]

the value of the geteuid(2) system call.

PROCINFO[“FS”]

“FS” if field splitting with FS is in effect, or “FIELDWIDTHS” if field splitting with FIELDWIDTHS is in effect.

PROCINFO[“gid”]

the value of the getgid(2) system call.

PROCINFO[“pgrpid”]

the process group ID of the current process.

PROCINFO[“pid”]

the process ID of the current process.

PROCINFO[“ppid”]

the parent process ID of the current process.

PROCINFO[“uid”]

the value of the getuid(2) system call.

PROCINFO[“version”]

The version of gawk. This is available from version 3.1.4 and later.

RSThe input record separator, by default a newline.RTThe record terminator. Gawk sets RT to the input text that matched the character or regular expression specified by RS.

RSTART

The index of the first character matched by match(); 0 if no match. (This implies that character indices start at one.)

RLENGTH

The length of the string matched by match(); -1 if no match.

SUBSEP

The character used to separate multiple subscripts in array elements, by default “\034”.

TEXTDOMAIN

The text domain of the AWK program; used to find the localized translations for the program’s strings.

Arrays

Arrays are subscripted with an expression between square brackets ([ and ]). If the expression is an expression list (expr, expr …) then the array subscript is a string consisting of the concatenation of the (string) value of each expression, separated by the value of the SUBSEP variable. This facility is used to simulate multiply dimensioned arrays. For example:
i = “A”; j = “B”; k = “C”
x[i, j, k] = “hello, world\n”
assigns the string “hello, world\n” to the element of the array x which is indexed by the string “A\034B\034C”. All arrays in AWK are associative, i.e. indexed by string values.The special operator in may be used to test if an array has an index consisting of a particular value.
if (val in array)
print array[val]
If the array has multiple subscripts, use (i, j) in array.The in construct may also be used in a for loop to iterate over all the elements of an array.An element may be deleted from an array using the delete statement. The delete statement may also be used to delete the entire contents of an array, just by specifying the array name without a subscript.

Variable Typing And Conversion

Variables and fields may be (floating point) numbers, or strings, or both. How the value of a variable is interpreted depends upon its context. If used in a numeric expression, it will be treated as a number; if used as a string it will be treated as a string.To force a variable to be treated as a number, add 0 to it; to force it to be treated as a string, concatenate it with the null string.When a string must be converted to a number, the conversion is accomplished using strtod(3). A number is converted to a string by using the value of CONVFMT as a format string for sprintf(3), with the numeric value of the variable as the argument. However, even though all numbers in AWK are floating-point, integral values are always converted as integers. Thus, given
CONVFMT = "%2.2f"
a = 12
b = a ""
the variable b has a string value of “12” and not “12.00”.When operating in POSIX mode (such as with the –posix command line option), beware that locale settings may interfere with the way decimal numbers are treated: the decimal separator of the numbers you are feeding to gawk must conform to what your locale would expect, be it a comma (,) or a period (.).Gawk performs comparisons as follows: If two variables are numeric, they are compared numerically. If one value is numeric and the other has a string value that is a “numeric string,” then comparisons are also done numerically. Otherwise, the numeric value is converted to a string and a string comparison is performed. Two strings are compared, of course, as strings.Note that string constants, such as “57”, are not numeric strings, they are string constants. The idea of “numeric string” only applies to fields, getline input, FILENAME, ARGV elements, ENVIRON elements and the elements of an array created by split() that are numeric strings. The basic idea is that user input, and only user input, that looks numeric, should be treated that way.

Uninitialized variables have the numeric value 0 and the string value “” (the null, or empty, string).

Octal and Hexadecimal Constants

Starting with version 3.1 of gawk , you may use C-style octal and hexadecimal constants in your AWK program source code. For example, the octal value 011 is equal to decimal 9, and the hexadecimal value 0x11 is equal to decimal 17.

String Constants

String constants in AWK are sequences of characters enclosed between double quotes (“). Within strings, certain escape sequences are recognized, as in C. These are:
\\A literal backslash.\aThe “alert” character; usually the ASCII BEL character.

\b

backspace.

\f

form-feed.

\n

newline.

\r

carriage return.

\t

horizontal tab.

\v

vertical tab.

\xhex digits
The character represented by the string of hexadecimal digits following the \x. As in ANSI C, all following hexadecimal digits are considered part of the escape sequence. (This feature should tell us something about language design by committee.) E.g., “\x1B” is the ASCII ESC (escape) character.
\dddThe character represented by the 1-, 2-, or 3-digit sequence of octal digits. E.g., “\033” is the ASCII ESC (escape) character.\cThe literal character c.
The escape sequences may also be used inside constant regular expressions (e.g., /[ \t\f\n\r\v]/ matches whitespace characters).In compatibility mode, the characters represented by octal and hexadecimal escape sequences are treated literally when used in regular expression constants. Thus, /a\52b/ is equivalent to /a\*b/.

Patterns And Actions

AWK is a line-oriented language. The pattern comes first, and then the action. Action statements are enclosed in { and }. Either the pattern may be missing, or the action may be missing, but, of course, not both. If the pattern is missing, the action is executed for every single record of input. A missing action is equivalent to

{ print }
which prints the entire record.Comments begin with the “#” character, and continue until the end of the line. Blank lines may be used to separate statements. Normally, a statement ends with a newline, however, this is not the case for lines ending in a “,”, {, ?, :, &&, or ||. Lines ending in do or else also have their statements automatically continued on the following line. In other cases, a line can be continued by ending it with a “\”, in which case the newline will be ignored.Multiple statements may be put on one line by separating them with a “;”. This applies to both the statements within the action part of a pattern-action pair (the usual case), and to the pattern-action statements themselves.

Patterns

AWK patterns may be one of the following:
BEGIN
END
/regular expression/
relational expression
pattern && pattern
pattern || pattern
pattern ? pattern : pattern
(pattern)
! pattern
pattern1, pattern2
BEGIN and END are two special kinds of patterns which are not tested against the input. The action parts of all BEGIN patterns are merged as if all the statements had been written in a single BEGIN block. They are executed before any of the input is read. Similarly, all the END blocks are merged, and executed when all the input is exhausted (or when an exit statement is executed). BEGIN and END patterns cannot be combined with other patterns in pattern expressions. BEGIN and END patterns cannot have missing action parts.For /regular expression/ patterns, the associated statement is executed for each input record that matches the regular expression. Regular expressions are the same as those in egrep(1), and are summarized below.A relational expression may use any of the operators defined below in the section on actions. These generally test whether certain fields match certain regular expressions.The &&, ||, and ! operators are logical AND, logical OR, and logical NOT, respectively, as in C. They do short-circuit evaluation, also as in C, and are used for combining more primitive pattern expressions. As in most languages, parentheses may be used to change the order of evaluation.

The ?: operator is like the same operator in C. If the first pattern is true then the pattern used for testing is the second pattern, otherwise it is the third. Only one of the second and third patterns is evaluated.

The pattern1, pattern2 form of an expression is called a range pattern. It matches all input records starting with a record that matches pattern1, and continuing until a record that matches pattern2, inclusive. It does not combine with any other sort of pattern expression.

Regular Expressions

Regular expressions are the extended kind found in egrep. They are composed of characters as follows:
cmatches the non-metacharacter c.\cmatches the literal character c.

.

matches any character including newline.

^

matches the beginning of a string.

$

matches the end of a string.

[abc…]

character list, matches any of the characters abc….

[^abc…]

negated character list, matches any character except abc….

r1|r2

alternation: matches either r1 or r2.

r1r2

concatenation: matches r1, and then r2.

r+

matches one or more r‘s.

r*

matches zero or more r‘s.

r?

matches zero or one r‘s.

(r)

grouping: matches r.

r{n}

r{n,}

r{n,m}

One or two numbers inside braces denote an interval expression. If there is one number in the braces, the preceding regular expression r is repeated n times. If there are two numbers separated by a comma, r is repeated n to m times. If there is one number followed by a comma, then r is repeated at least n times.

Interval expressions are only available if either –posix or –re-interval is specified on the command line.
\ymatches the empty string at either the beginning or the end of a word.\Bmatches the empty string within a word.

\<

matches the empty string at the beginning of a word.

\>

matches the empty string at the end of a word.

\w

matches any word-constituent character (letter, digit, or underscore).

\W

matches any character that is not word-constituent.

\’

matches the empty string at the beginning of a buffer (string).

\’

matches the empty string at the end of a buffer.

The escape sequences that are valid in string constants (see below) are also valid in regular expressions.Character classes are a feature introduced in the POSIX standard. A character class is a special notation for describing lists of characters that have a specific attribute, but where the actual characters themselves can vary from country to country and/or from character set to character set. For example, the notion of what is an alphabetic character differs in the USA and in France.A character class is only valid in a regular expression inside the brackets of a character list. Character classes consist of [:, a keyword denoting the class, and :]. The character classes defined by the POSIX standard are:
[:alnum:]Alphanumeric characters.[:alpha:]Alphabetic characters.

[:blank:]

Space or tab characters.

[:cntrl:]

Control characters.

[:digit:]

Numeric characters.

[:graph:]

Characters that are both printable and visible. (A space is printable, but not visible, while an a is both.)

[:lower:]

Lower-case alphabetic characters.

[:print:]

Printable characters (characters that are not control characters.)

[:punct:]

Punctuation characters (characters that are not letter, digits, control characters, or space characters).

[:space:]

Space characters (such as space, tab, and formfeed, to name a few).

[:upper:]

Upper-case alphabetic characters.

[:xdigit:]

Characters that are hexadecimal digits.

For example, before the POSIX standard, to match alphanumeric characters, you would have had to write /[A-Za-z0-9]/. If your character set had other alphabetic characters in it, this would not match them, and if your character set collated differently from ASCII , this might not even match the ASCII alphanumeric characters. With the POSIX character classes, you can write /[[:alnum:]]/, and this matches the alphabetic and numeric characters in your character set, no matter what it is.Two additional special sequences can appear in character lists. These apply to non- ASCII character sets, which can have single symbols (called collating elements) that are represented with more than one character, as well as several characters that are equivalent for collating, or sorting, purposes. (E.g., in French, a plain “e” and a grave-accented “`” are equivalent.)
Collating Symbols
A collating symbol is a multi-character collating element enclosed in [. and .]. For example, if ch is a collating element, then [[.ch.]] is a regular expression that matches this collating element, while [ch] is a regular expression that matches either c or h.
Equivalence Classes
An equivalence class is a locale-specific name for a list of characters that are equivalent. The name is enclosed in [= and =]. For example, the name e might be used to represent all of “e,” “‘,” and “`.” In this case, [[=e=]] is a regular expression that matches any of e, ‘, or `.
These features are very valuable in non-English speaking locales. The library functions that gawk uses for regular expression matching currently only recognize POSIX character classes; they do not recognize collating symbols or equivalence classes.The \y, \B, \<, \>, \w, \W, \’, and \’ operators are specific to gawk; they are extensions based on facilities in the GNU regular expression libraries.The various command line options control how gawk interprets characters in regular expressions.
No options
In the default case, gawk provide all the facilities of POSIX regular expressions and the GNU regular expression operators described above. However, interval expressions are not supported.
–posix
Only POSIX regular expressions are supported, the GNU operators are not special. (E.g., \w matches a literal w). Interval expressions are allowed.
–traditional
Traditional Unix awk regular expressions are matched. The GNU operators are not special, interval expressions are not available, and neither are the POSIX character classes ([[:alnum:]] and so on). Characters described by octal and hexadecimal escape sequences are treated literally, even if they represent regular expression metacharacters.
–re-interval
Allow interval expressions in regular expressions, even if –traditional has been provided.

Actions

Action statements are enclosed in braces, { and }. Action statements consist of the usual assignment, conditional, and looping statements found in most languages. The operators, control statements, and input/output statements available are patterned after those in C.

Operators

The operators in AWK , in order of decreasing precedence, are
(…)Grouping$Field reference.

++ —

Increment and decrement, both prefix and postfix.

^

Exponentiation (** may also be used, and **= for the assignment operator).

+ – !

Unary plus, unary minus, and logical negation.

* / %

Multiplication, division, and modulus.

+ –

Addition and subtraction.

space

String concatenation.

| |&

Piped I/O for getline, print, and printf.

< >

<= >=

!= ==

The regular relational operators.

~ !~

Regular expression match, negated match. NOTE: Do not use a constant regular expression (/foo/) on the left-hand side of a ~ or !~. Only use one on the right-hand side. The expression /foo/ ~ exp has the same meaning as (($0 ~ /foo/) ~ exp). This is usually not what was intended.

in

Array membership.

&&

Logical AND.

||

Logical OR.

?:

The C conditional expression. This has the form expr1 ? expr2 : expr3. If expr1 is true, the value of the expression is expr2, otherwise it is expr3. Only one of expr2 and expr3 is evaluated.

= += -=

*= /= %= ^=

Assignment. Both absolute assignment (var = value) and operator-assignment (the other forms) are supported.

Control Statements

The control statements are as follows:
if (condition) statement [ else statement ]
while (condition) statement
do statement while (condition)
for (expr1; expr2; expr3) statement
for (var in array) statement
break
continue
delete array[index]
delete array
exit [ expression ]
{ statements }

I/O Statements

The input/output statements are as follows:
close(file [, how])Close file, pipe or co-process. The optional how should only be used when closing one end of a two-way pipe to a co-process. It must be a string value, either “to” or “from”.getlineSet $0 from next input record; set NF, NR, FNR.

getline <file

Set $0 from next record of file; set NF.

getline var

Set var from next input record; set NR, FNR.

getline var <file

Set var from next record of file.

command | getline [var]

Run command piping the output either into $0 or var, as above.

command |& getline [var]

Run command as a co-process piping the output either into $0 or var, as above. Co-processes are a gawk extension. (command can also be a socket. See the subsection Special File Names, below.)

nextStop processing the current input record. The next input record is read and processing starts over with the first pattern in the AWK program. If the end of the input data is reached, the END block(s), if any, are executed.nextfileStop processing the current input file. The next input record read comes from the next input file. FILENAME and ARGIND are updated, FNR is reset to 1, and processing starts over with the first pattern in the AWK program. If the end of the input data is reached, the END block(s), if any, are executed.

print

Prints the current record. The output record is terminated with the value of the ORS variable.

print expr-list

Prints expressions. Each expression is separated by the value of the OFS variable. The output record is terminated with the value of the ORS variable.

print expr-list >file

Prints expressions on file. Each expression is separated by the value of the OFS variable. The output record is terminated with the value of the ORS variable.

printf fmt, expr-list

Format and print.

printf fmt, expr-list >file

Format and print on file.

system(cmd-line)Execute the command cmd-line, and return the exit status. (This may not be available on non- POSIX systems.)fflush([file])Flush any buffers associated with the open output file or pipe file. If file is missing, then standard output is flushed. If file is the null string, then all open output files and pipes have their buffers flushed.
Additional output redirections are allowed for print and printf.
print … >> file
Appends output to the file.
print … | command
Writes on a pipe.
print … |& command
Sends data to a co-process or socket. (See also the subsection Special File Names, below.)
The getline command returns 1 on success, 0 on end of file, and -1 on an error. Upon an error, ERRNO contains a string describing the problem.NOTE: If using a pipe, co-process, or socket to getline, or from print or printf within a loop, you must use close() to create new instances of the command or socket. AWK does not automatically close pipes, sockets, or co-processes when they return EOF.

The printf Statement

The AWK versions of the printf statement and sprintf() function (see below) accept the following conversion specification formats:
%cAn ASCII character. If the argument used for %c is numeric, it is treated as a character and printed. Otherwise, the argument is assumed to be a string, and the only first character of that string is printed.%d, %iA decimal number (the integer part).

%e,
%E A floating point number of the form [-]d.dddddde[+-]dd. The %E format uses E instead of e.
%f, %F A floating point number of the form [-]ddd.dddddd. If the system library supports it, %F is available as well. This is like %f, but uses capital letters for special “not a number” and “infinity” values. If %F is not available, gawk uses %f.
%g, %G Use %e or %f conversion, whichever is shorter, with nonsignificant zeros suppressed. The %G format uses %E instead of %e.
%o An unsigned octal number (also an integer).
%u An unsigned decimal number (again, an integer).
%s A character string.
%x, %X An unsigned hexadecimal number (an integer). The %X format uses ABCDEF instead of abcdef.
%% A single % character; no argument is converted.
NOTE: When using the integer format-control letters for values that are outside the range of a C long integer, gawk switches to the %0f format specifier. If –lint is provided on the command line gawk warns about this. Other versions of awk may print invalid values or do something else entirely.Optional, additional parameters may lie between the % and the control letter:
count$Use the count‘th argument at this point in the formatting. This is called a positional specifier and is intended primarily for use in translated versions of format strings, not in the original text of an AWK program. It is a gawk extension.–The expression should be left-justified within its field.

space

For numeric conversions, prefix positive values with a space, and negative values with a minus sign.

+

The plus sign, used before the width modifier (see below), says to always supply a sign for numeric conversions, even if the data to be formatted is positive. The + overrides the space modifier.

#

Use an “alternate form” for certain control letters. For %o, supply a leading zero. For %x, and %X, supply a leading 0x or 0X for a nonzero result. For %e, %E, %f and %F, the result always contains a decimal point. For %g, and %G, trailing zeros are not removed from the result.

0

A leading 0 (zero) acts as a flag, that indicates output should be padded with zeroes instead of spaces. This applies even to non-numeric output formats. This flag only has an effect when the field width is wider than the value to be printed.

width

The field should be padded to this width. The field is normally padded with spaces. If the 0 flag has been used, it is padded with zeroes.

.prec

A number that specifies the precision to use when printing. For the %e, %E, %f and %F, formats, this specifies the number of digits you want printed to the right of the decimal point. For the %g, and %G formats, it specifies the maximum number of significant digits. For the %d, %o, %i, %u, %x, and %X formats, it specifies the minimum number of digits to print. For %s, it specifies the maximum number of characters from the string that should be printed.

The dynamic width and prec capabilities of the ANSI C printf() routines are supported. A * in place of either the width or prec specifications causes their values to be taken from the argument list to printf or sprintf(). To use a positional specifier with a dynamic width or precision, supply the count$ after the * in the format string. For example, “%3$*2$.*1$s”.

Special File Names

When doing I/O redirection from either print or printf into a file, or via getline from a file, gawk recognizes certain special filenames internally. These filenames allow access to open file descriptors inherited from gawk‘s parent process (usually the shell). These file names may also be used on the command line to name data files. The filenames are:
/dev/stdinThe standard input./dev/stdoutThe standard output.

/dev/stderr

The standard error output.

/dev/fd/n

The file associated with the open file descriptor n.

These are particularly useful for error messages. For example:
print “You blew it!” > “/dev/stderr”
whereas you would otherwise have to use
print “You blew it!” | “cat 1>&2”
The following special filenames may be used with the |& co-process operator for creating TCP/IP network connections.
/inet/tcp/lport/rhost/rportFile for TCP/IP connection on local port lport to remote host rhost on remote port rport. Use a port of 0 to have the system pick a port./inet/udp/lport/rhost/rportSimilar, but use UDP/IP instead of TCP/IP.

/inet/raw/lport/rhost/rport

Reserved for future use.

Other special filenames provide access to information about the running gawk process. These filenames are now obsolete. Use the PROCINFO array to obtain the information they provide. The filenames are:
/dev/pidReading this file returns the process ID of the current process, in decimal, terminated with a newline./dev/ppidReading this file returns the parent process ID of the current process, in decimal, terminated with a newline.

/dev/pgrpid

Reading this file returns the process group ID of the current process, in decimal, terminated with a newline.

/dev/user

Reading this file returns a single record terminated with a newline. The fields are separated with spaces. $1 is the value of the getuid(2) system call, $2 is the value of the geteuid(2) system call, $3 is the value of the getgid(2) system call, and $4 is the value of the getegid(2) system call. If there are any additional fields, they are the group IDs returned by getgroups(2). Multiple groups may not be supported on all systems.

Numeric Functions

AWK has the following built-in arithmetic functions:
atan2(y, x)Returns the arctangent of y/x in radians.cos(expr)Returns the cosine of expr, which is in radians.

exp(expr)

The exponential function.

int(expr)

Truncates to integer.

log(expr)

The natural logarithm function.

rand()

Returns a random number N, between 0 and 1, such that 0 ≤ N < 1.

sin(expr)

Returns the sine of expr, which is in radians.

sqrt(expr)

The square root function.

srand([expr])

Uses expr as a new seed for the random number generator. If no expr is provided, the time of day is used. The return value is the previous seed for the random number generator.

String Functions

Gawk has the following built-in string functions:
asort(s [, d])Returns the number of elements in the source array s. The contents of s are sorted using gawk‘s normal rules for comparing values, and the indices of the sorted values of s are replaced with sequential integers starting with 1. If the optional destination array d is specified, then s is first duplicated into d, and then d is sorted, leaving the indices of the source array s unchanged.asorti(s [, d])Returns the number of elements in the source array s. The behavior is the same as that of asort(), except that the array indices are used for sorting, not the array values. When done, the array is indexed numerically, and the values are those of the original indices. The original values are lost; thus provide a second array if you wish to preserve the original.

gensub(r, s, h [, t])

Search the target string t for matches of the regular expression r. If h is a string beginning with g or G, then replace all matches of r with s. Otherwise, h is a number indicating which match of r to replace. If t is not supplied, $0 is used instead. Within the replacement text s, the sequence \n, where n is a digit from 1 to 9, may be used to indicate just the text that matched the n‘th parenthesized subexpression. The sequence \0 represents the entire matched text, as does the character &. Unlike sub() and gsub(), the modified string is returned as the result of the function, and the original target string is not changed.

gsub(r, s [, t])

For each substring matching the regular expression r in the string t, substitute the string s, and return the number of substitutions. If t is not supplied, use $0. An & in the replacement text is replaced with the text that was actually matched. Use \& to get a literal &. (This must be typed as “\\&”; see GAWK: Effective AWK Programming for a fuller discussion of the rules for &’s and backslashes in the replacement text of sub(), gsub(), and gensub().)

index(s, t)

Returns the index of the string t in the string s, or 0 if t is not present. (This implies that character indices start at one.)

length([s])

Returns the length of the string s, or the length of $0 if s is not supplied. Starting with version 3.1.5, as a non-standard extension, with an array argument, length() returns the number of elements in the array.

match(s, r [, a])

Returns the position in s where the regular expression r occurs, or 0 if r is not present, and sets the values of RSTART and RLENGTH. Note that the argument order is the same as for the ~ operator: str ~ re. If array a is provided, a is cleared and then elements 1 through n are filled with the portions of s that match the corresponding parenthesized subexpression in r. The 0’th element of a contains the portion of s matched by the entire regular expression r. Subscripts a[n, “start”], and a[n, “length”] provide the starting index in the string and length respectively, of each matching substring.

split(s, a [, r])

Splits the string s into the array a on the regular expression r, and returns the number of fields. If r is omitted, FS is used instead. The array a is cleared first. Splitting behaves identically to field splitting, described above.

sprintf(fmt, expr-list)

Prints expr-list according to fmt, and returns the resulting string.

strtonum(str)

Examines str, and returns its numeric value. If str begins with a leading 0, strtonum() assumes that str is an octal number. If str begins with a leading 0x or 0X, strtonum() assumes that str is a hexadecimal number.

sub(r, s [, t])

Just like gsub(), but only the first matching substring is replaced.

substr(s, i [, n])

Returns the at most n-character substring of s starting at i. If n is omitted, the rest of s is used.

tolower(str)

Returns a copy of the string str, with all the upper-case characters in str translated to their corresponding lower-case counterparts. Non-alphabetic characters are left unchanged.

toupper(str)

Returns a copy of the string str, with all the lower-case characters in str translated to their corresponding upper-case counterparts. Non-alphabetic characters are left unchanged.

As of version 3.1.5, gawk is multibyte aware. This means that index(), length(), substr() and match() all work in terms of characters, not bytes.

Time Functions

Since one of the primary uses of AWK programs is processing log files that contain time stamp information, gawk provides the following functions for obtaining time stamps and formatting them.
mktime(datespec)
Turns datespec into a time stamp of the same form as returned by systime(). The datespec is a string of the form YYYY MM DD HH MM SS[ DST]. The contents of the string are six or seven numbers representing respectively the full year including century, the month from 1 to 12, the day of the month from 1 to 31, the hour of the day from 0 to 23, the minute from 0 to 59, and the second from 0 to 60, and an optional daylight saving flag. The values of these numbers need not be within the ranges specified; for example, an hour of -1 means 1 hour before midnight. The origin-zero Gregorian calendar is assumed, with year 0 preceding year 1 and year -1 preceding year 0. The time is assumed to be in the local timezone. If the daylight saving flag is positive, the time is assumed to be daylight saving time; if zero, the time is assumed to be standard time; and if negative (the default), mktime() attempts to determine whether daylight saving time is in effect for the specified time. If datespec does not contain enough elements or if the resulting time is out of range, mktime() returns -1.
strftime([format [, timestamp[, utc-flag]]])
Formats timestamp according to the specification in format. If utc-flag is present and is non-zero or non-null, the result is in UTC, otherwise the result is in local time. The timestamp should be of the same form as returned by systime(). If timestamp is missing, the current time of day is used. If format is missing, a default format equivalent to the output of date(1) is used. See the specification for the strftime() function in ANSI C for the format conversions that are guaranteed to be available.
systime()Returns the current time of day as the number of seconds since the Epoch (1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC on POSIX systems).

Bit Manipulations Functions

Starting with version 3.1 of gawk, the following bit manipulation functions are available. They work by converting double-precision floating point values to uintmax_t integers, doing the operation, and then converting the result back to floating point. The functions are:
and(v1, v2)Return the bitwise AND of the values provided by v1 and v2.compl(val)Return the bitwise complement of val.

lshift(val, count)

Return the value of val, shifted left by count bits.

or(v1, v2)

Return the bitwise OR of the values provided by v1 and v2.

rshift(val, count)

Return the value of val, shifted right by count bits.

xor(v1, v2)

Return the bitwise XOR of the values provided by v1 and v2.

Internationalization Functions

Starting with version 3.1 of gawk, the following functions may be used from within your AWK program for translating strings at run-time. For full details, see GAWK: Effective AWK Programming.
bindtextdomain(directory [, domain])
Specifies the directory where gawk looks for the .mo files, in case they will not or cannot be placed in the ”standard” locations (e.g., during testing). It returns the directory where domain is ”bound.”
The default domain is the value of TEXTDOMAIN. If directory is the null string (“”), then bindtextdomain() returns the current binding for the given domain.
dcgettext(string [, domain [, category]])
Returns the translation of string in text domain domain for locale category category. The default value for domain is the current value of TEXTDOMAIN. The default value for category is “LC_MESSAGES”.
If you supply a value for category, it must be a string equal to one of the known locale categories described in GAWK: Effective AWK Programming. You must also supply a text domain. Use TEXTDOMAIN if you want to use the current domain.
dcngettext(string1 , string2 , number [, domain [, category]])
Returns the plural form used for number of the translation of string1 and string2 in text domain domain for locale category category. The default value for domain is the current value of TEXTDOMAIN. The default value for category is “LC_MESSAGES”.
If you supply a value for category, it must be a string equal to one of the known locale categories described in GAWK: Effective AWK Programming. You must also supply a text domain. Use TEXTDOMAIN if you want to use the current domain.

User-defined Functions

Functions in AWK are defined as follows:

function name(parameter list) { statements }
Functions are executed when they are called from within expressions in either patterns or actions. Actual parameters supplied in the function call are used to instantiate the formal parameters declared in the function. Arrays are passed by reference, other variables are passed by value.Since functions were not originally part of the AWK language, the provision for local variables is rather clumsy: They are declared as extra parameters in the parameter list. The convention is to separate local variables from real parameters by extra spaces in the parameter list. For example:
function f(p, q, a, b)# a and b are local
{
…
}
/abc/{ … ; f(1, 2) ; … }
The left parenthesis in a function call is required to immediately follow the function name, without any intervening white space. This avoids a syntactic ambiguity with the concatenation operator. This restriction does not apply to the built-in functions listed above.Functions may call each other and may be recursive. Function parameters used as local variables are initialized to the null string and the number zero upon function invocation.Use return expr to return a value from a function. The return value is undefined if no value is provided, or if the function returns by “falling off” the end.If –lint has been provided, gawk warns about calls to undefined functions at parse time, instead of at run time. Calling an undefined function at run time is a fatal error.

The word func may be used in place of function.

Dynamically Loading New Functions

Beginning with version 3.1 of gawk, you can dynamically add new built-in functions to the running gawk interpreter. The full details are beyond the scope of this manual page; see GAWK: Effective AWK Programming for the details.

extension(object, function)
Dynamically link the shared object file named by object, and invoke function in that object, to perform initialization. These should both be provided as strings. Returns the value returned by function.
This function is provided and documented in GAWK: Effective AWK Programming, but everything about this feature is likely to change eventually. We STRONGLY recommend that you do not use this feature for anything that you aren’t willing to redo.

Signals

pgawk accepts two signals. SIGUSR1 causes it to dump a profile and function call stack to the profile file, which is either awkprof.out, or whatever file was named with the –profile option. It then continues to run. SIGHUP causes pgawk to dump the profile and function call stack and then exit.

Examples

Print and sort the login names of all users:

BEGIN{ FS = “:” }

{ print $1 | “sort” }

Count lines in a file:

{ nlines++ }

END

{ print nlines }

Precede each line by its number in the file:

{ print FNR, $0 }

Concatenate and line number (a variation on a theme):

{ print NR, $0 }

Run an external command for particular lines of data:

tail -f access_log |

awk ‘/myhome.html/ { system(“nmap ” $1 “>> logdir/myhome.html”) }’

Internationalization

String constants are sequences of characters enclosed in double quotes. In non-English speaking environments, it is possible to mark strings in the AWK program as requiring translation to the native natural language. Such strings are marked in the AWK program with a leading underscore (“_”). For example,

gawk ‘BEGIN { print “hello, world” }’
always prints hello, world. But,
gawk ‘BEGIN { print _”hello, world” }’
might print bonjour, monde in France.There are several steps involved in producing and running a localizable AWK program.
1.Add a BEGIN action to assign a value to the TEXTDOMAIN variable to set the text domain to a name associated with your program.
BEGIN { TEXTDOMAIN = "myprog" }
This allows gawk to find the .mo file associated with your program. Without this step, gawk uses the messages text domain, which likely does not contain translations for your program.
2.Mark all strings that should be translated with leading underscores.3.If necessary, use the dcgettext() and/or bindtextdomain() functions in your program, as appropriate.

4.

Run gawk –gen-po -f myprog.awk > myprog.po to generate a .po file for your program.

5.

Provide appropriate translations, and build and install the corresponding .mo files.

The internationalization features are described in full detail in GAWK: Effective AWK Programming.

Posix Compatibility

A primary goal for gawk is compatibility with the POSIX standard, as well as with the latest version of UNIX awk. To this end, gawk incorporates the following user visible features which are not described in the AWK book, but are part of the Bell Laboratories version of awk, and are in the POSIX standard.

The book indicates that command line variable assignment happens when awk would otherwise open the argument as a file, which is after the BEGIN block is executed. However, in earlier implementations, when such an assignment appeared before any file names, the assignment would happen before the BEGIN block was run. Applications came to depend on this “feature.” When awk was changed to match its documentation, the -v option for assigning variables before program execution was added to accommodate applications that depended upon the old behavior. (This feature was agreed upon by both the Bell Laboratories and the GNU developers.)

The -W option for implementation specific features is from the POSIX standard.

When processing arguments, gawk uses the special option “–” to signal the end of arguments. In compatibility mode, it warns about but otherwise ignores undefined options. In normal operation, such arguments are passed on to the AWK program for it to process.

The AWK book does not define the return value of srand(). The POSIX standard has it return the seed it was using, to allow keeping track of random number sequences. Therefore srand() in gawk also returns its current seed.

Other new features are: The use of multiple -f options (from MKS awk); the ENVIRON array; the \a, and \v escape sequences (done originally in gawk and fed back into the Bell Laboratories version); the tolower() and toupper() built-in functions (from the Bell Laboratories version); and the ANSI C conversion specifications in printf (done first in the Bell Laboratories version).

Historical Features

There are two features of historical AWK implementations that gawk supports. First, it is possible to call the length() built-in function not only with no argument, but even without parentheses! Thus,

a = length# Holy Algol 60, Batman!
is the same as either of
a = length()
a = length($0)
This feature is marked as “deprecated” in the POSIX standard, and gawk issues a warning about its use if –lint is specified on the command line.The other feature is the use of either the continue or the break statements outside the body of a while, for, or do loop. Traditional AWK implementations have treated such usage as equivalent to the next statement. Gawk supports this usage if –traditional has been specified.

Gnu Extensions

Gawk has a number of extensions to POSIX awk. They are described in this section. All the extensions described here can be disabled by invoking gawk with the –traditional or –posix options.

The following features of gawk are not available in POSIX awk.

• No path search is performed for files named via the -f option. Therefore the AWKPATH environment variable is not special.• The \x escape sequence. (Disabled with –posix.)• The fflush() function. (Disabled with –posix.)• The ability to continue lines after ? and :. (Disabled with –posix.)

• Octal and hexadecimal constants in AWK programs.

• The ARGIND, BINMODE, ERRNO, LINT, RT and TEXTDOMAIN variables are not special.

• The IGNORECASE variable and its side-effects are not available.

• The FIELDWIDTHS variable and fixed-width field splitting.

• The PROCINFO array is not available.

• The use of RS as a regular expression.

• The special file names available for I/O redirection are not recognized.

• The |& operator for creating co-processes.

• The ability to split out individual characters using the null string as the value of FS, and as the third argument to split().

• The optional second argument to the close() function.

• The optional third argument to the match() function.

• The ability to use positional specifiers with printf and sprintf().

• The ability to pass an array to length().

• The use of delete array to delete the entire contents of an array.

• The use of nextfile to abandon processing of the current input file.

• The and(), asort(), asorti(), bindtextdomain(), compl(), dcgettext(), dcngettext(), gensub(), lshift(), mktime(), or(), rshift(), strftime(), strtonum(), systime() and xor() functions.• Localizable strings.• Adding new built-in functions dynamically with the extension() function.
The AWK book does not define the return value of the close() function. Gawk‘s close() returns the value from fclose(3), or pclose(3), when closing an output file or pipe, respectively. It returns the process’s exit status when closing an input pipe. The return value is -1 if the named file, pipe or co-process was not opened with a redirection.When gawk is invoked with the –traditional option, if the fs argument to the -F option is “t”, then FS is set to the tab character. Note that typing gawk -F\t … simply causes the shell to quote the “t,” and does not pass “\t” to the -F option. Since this is a rather ugly special case, it is not the default behavior. This behavior also does not occur if –posix has been specified. To really get a tab character as the field separator, it is best to use single quotes: gawk -F’\t’ ….If gawk is configured with the –enable-switch option to the configure command, then it accepts an additional control-flow statement:
switch (expression) {
case value|regex : statement
...
[ default: statement ]
}
If gawk is configured with the –disable-directories-fatal option, then it will silently skip directories named on the command line. Otherwise, it will do so only if invoked with the –traditional option.

Environment Variables

The AWKPATH environment variable can be used to provide a list of directories that gawk searches when looking for files named via the -f and –file options.

If POSIXLY_CORRECT exists in the environment, then gawk behaves exactly as if –posix had been specified on the command line. If –lint has been specified, gawk issues a warning message to this effect.

See Also

egrep(1), getpid(2), getppid(2), getpgrp(2), getuid(2), geteuid(2), getgid(2), getegid(2), getgroups(2)

The AWK Programming Language, Alfred V. Aho, Brian W. Kernighan, Peter J. Weinberger, Addison-Wesley, 1988. ISBN 0-201-07981-X.

GAWK: Effective AWK Programming, Edition 3.0, published by the Free Software Foundation, 2001. The current version of this document is available online at http://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual.

Bugs

The -F option is not necessary given the command line variable assignment feature; it remains only for backwards compatibility.

Syntactically invalid single character programs tend to overflow the parse stack, generating a rather unhelpful message. Such programs are surprisingly difficult to diagnose in the completely general case, and the effort to do so really is not worth it.

Authors

The original version of UNIX awk was designed and implemented by Alfred Aho, Peter Weinberger, and Brian Kernighan of Bell Laboratories. Brian Kernighan continues to maintain and enhance it.

Paul Rubin and Jay Fenlason, of the Free Software Foundation, wrote gawk, to be compatible with the original version of awk distributed in Seventh Edition UNIX . John Woods contributed a number of bug fixes. David Trueman, with contributions from Arnold Robbins, made gawk compatible with the new version of UNIX awk. Arnold Robbins is the current maintainer.

The initial DOS port was done by Conrad Kwok and Scott Garfinkle. Scott Deifik is the current DOS maintainer. Pat Rankin did the port to VMS, and Michal Jaegermann did the port to the Atari ST. The port to OS/2 was done by Kai Uwe Rommel, with contributions and help from Darrel Hankerson. Andreas Buening now maintains the OS/2 port. Fred Fish supplied support for the Amiga, and Martin Brown provided the BeOS port. Stephen Davies provided the original Tandem port, and Matthew Woehlke provided changes for Tandem’s POSIX-compliant systems. Ralf Wildenhues now maintains that port.

See the README file in the gawk distribution for current information about maintainers and which ports are currently supported.

Version Information

This man page documents gawk, version 3.1.7.

Bug Reports

If you find a bug in gawk, please send electronic mail to bug-gawk@gnu.org. Please include your operating system and its revision, the version of gawk (from gawk –version), what C compiler you used to compile it, and a test program and data that are as small as possible for reproducing the problem.

Before sending a bug report, please do the following things. First, verify that you have the latest version of gawk. Many bugs (usually subtle ones) are fixed at each release, and if yours is out of date, the problem may already have been solved. Second, please see if setting the environment variable LC_ALL to LC_ALL=C causes things to behave as you expect. If so, it’s a locale issue, and may or may not really be a bug. Finally, please read this man page and the reference manual carefully to be sure that what you think is a bug really is, instead of just a quirk in the language.

Whatever you do, do NOT post a bug report in comp.lang.awk. While the gawk developers occasionally read this newsgroup, posting bug reports there is an unreliable way to report bugs. Instead, please use the electronic mail addresses given above.

If you’re using a GNU/Linux system or BSD-based system, you may wish to submit a bug report to the vendor of your distribution. That’s fine, but please send a copy to the official email address as well, since there’s no guarantee that the bug will be forwarded to the gawk maintainer.

Acknowledgements

Brian Kernighan of Bell Laboratories provided valuable assistance during testing and debugging. We thank him.

Copying Permissions

Copyright © 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual page provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.

Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual page under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one.

Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual page into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Foundation.

Referenced By

amplot(8), faxcron(8), igawk(1)

Filed Under: Linux, Man Pages

sed – Man Page

April 7, 2019 by blogadmin

sed(1) – Linux man page

Name

sed – stream editor for filtering and transforming text

Synopsis

sed [OPTION]… {script-only-if-no-other-script} [input-file]…

Description

Sed is a stream editor. A stream editor is used to perform basic text transformations on an input stream (a file or input from a pipeline). While in some ways similar to an editor which permits scripted edits (such as ed), sed works by making only one pass over the input(s), and is consequently more efficient. But it is sed‘s ability to filter text in a pipeline which particularly distinguishes it from other types of editors.

-n, –quiet, –silent
suppress automatic printing of pattern space
-e script, –expression=script
add the script to the commands to be executed
-f script-file, –file=script-file
add the contents of script-file to the commands to be executed
–follow-symlinks
follow symlinks when processing in place; hard links will still be broken.
-i[SUFFIX], –in-place[=SUFFIX]
edit files in place (makes backup if extension supplied). The default operation mode is to break symbolic and hard links. This can be changed with –follow-symlinks and –copy.
-c, –copy
use copy instead of rename when shuffling files in -i mode. While this will avoid breaking links (symbolic or hard), the resulting editing operation is not atomic. This is rarely the desired mode; –follow-symlinks is usually enough, and it is both faster and more secure.
-l N, –line-length=N
specify the desired line-wrap length for the ‘l’ command
–posix
disable all GNU extensions.
-r, –regexp-extended
use extended regular expressions in the script.
-s, –separate
consider files as separate rather than as a single continuous long stream.
-u, –unbuffered
load minimal amounts of data from the input files and flush the output buffers more often
–helpdisplay this help and exit
–version
output version information and exit
If no -e, –expression, -f, or –file option is given, then the first non-option argument is taken as the sed script to interpret. All remaining arguments are names of input files; if no input files are specified, then the standard input is read.GNU sed home page: <http://www.gnu.org/software/sed/>. General help using GNU software: <http://www.gnu.org/gethelp/>. E-mail bug reports to: <bug-gnu-utils@gnu.org>. Be sure to include the word ”sed” somewhere in the ”Subject:” field.

Command Synopsis

This is just a brief synopsis of sed commands to serve as a reminder to those who already know sed; other documentation (such as the texinfo document) must be consulted for fuller descriptions.

Zero-address ”commands”

: label
Label for b and t commands.
#comment
The comment extends until the next newline (or the end of a -e script fragment).
}The closing bracket of a { } block.

Zero- or One- address commands

=Print the current line number.a \text

Append text, which has each embedded newline preceded by a backslash.

i \

text

Insert text, which has each embedded newline preceded by a backslash.

q [exit-code]
Immediately quit the sed script without processing any more input, except that if auto-print is not disabled the current pattern space will be printed. The exit code argument is a GNU extension.
Q [exit-code]
Immediately quit the sed script without processing any more input. This is a GNU extension.
r filename
Append text read from filename.
R filename
Append a line read from filename. Each invocation of the command reads a line from the file. This is a GNU extension.

Commands which accept address ranges

{Begin a block of commands (end with a }).
b label
Branch to label; if label is omitted, branch to end of script.
t label
If a s/// has done a successful substitution since the last input line was read and since the last t or T command, then branch to label; if label is omitted, branch to end of script.
T label
If no s/// has done a successful substitution since the last input line was read and since the last t or T command, then branch to label; if label is omitted, branch to end of script. This is a GNU extension.
c \textReplace the selected lines with text, which has each embedded newline preceded by a backslash.d

Delete pattern space. Start next cycle.

D

Delete up to the first embedded newline in the pattern space. Start next cycle, but skip reading from the input if there is still data in the pattern space.

h H

Copy/append pattern space to hold space.

g G

Copy/append hold space to pattern space.

x

Exchange the contents of the hold and pattern spaces.

l

List out the current line in a ”visually unambiguous” form.

l width
List out the current line in a ”visually unambiguous” form, breaking it at width characters. This is a GNU extension.
n NRead/append the next line of input into the pattern space.pPrint the current pattern space.

P

Print up to the first embedded newline of the current pattern space.

s/regexp/replacement/
Attempt to match regexp against the pattern space. If successful, replace that portion matched with replacement. The replacement may contain the special character & to refer to that portion of the pattern space which matched, and the special escapes \1 through \9 to refer to the corresponding matching sub-expressions in the regexp.
w filename
Write the current pattern space to filename.
W filename
Write the first line of the current pattern space to filename. This is a GNU extension.
y/source/dest/
Transliterate the characters in the pattern space which appear in source to the corresponding character in dest.

Addresses

Sed commands can be given with no addresses, in which case the command will be executed for all input lines; with one address, in which case the command will only be executed for input lines which match that address; or with two addresses, in which case the command will be executed for all input lines which match the inclusive range of lines starting from the first address and continuing to the second address. Three things to note about address ranges: the syntax is addr1,addr2 (i.e., the addresses are separated by a comma); the line which addr1 matched will always be accepted, even if addr2 selects an earlier line; and if addr2 is a regexp, it will not be tested against the line that addr1 matched.

After the address (or address-range), and before the command, a ! may be inserted, which specifies that the command shall only be executed if the address (or address-range) does not match.

The following address types are supported:

numberMatch only the specified line number.
first~step
Match every step‘th line starting with line first. For example, ”sed -n 1~2p” will print all the odd-numbered lines in the input stream, and the address 2~5 will match every fifth line, starting with the second. first can be zero; in this case, sed operates as if it were equal to step. (This is an extension.)
$Match the last line.
/regexp/
Match lines matching the regular expression regexp.
\cregexpc
Match lines matching the regular expression regexp. The c may be any character.
GNU sed also supports some special 2-address forms:
0,addr2
Start out in “matched first address” state, until addr2 is found. This is similar to 1,addr2, except that if addr2 matches the very first line of input the 0,addr2 form will be at the end of its range, whereas the 1,addr2 form will still be at the beginning of its range. This works only when addr2 is a regular expression.
addr1,+N
Will match addr1 and the N lines following addr1.
addr1,~N
Will match addr1 and the lines following addr1 until the next line whose input line number is a multiple of N.

Regular Expressions

POSIX.2 BREs should be supported, but they aren’t completely because of performance problems. The \n sequence in a regular expression matches the newline character, and similarly for \a, \t, and other sequences.

Bugs

E-mail bug reports to bonzini@gnu.org. Be sure to include the word ”sed” somewhere in the ”Subject:” field. Also, please include the output of ”sed –version” in the body of your report if at all possible.

Copyright

Copyright © 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, to the extent permitted by law.

GNU sed home page: <http://www.gnu.org/software/sed/>. General help using GNU software: <http://www.gnu.org/gethelp/>. E-mail bug reports to: <bug-gnu-utils@gnu.org>. Be sure to include the word ”sed” somewhere in the ”Subject:” field.

See Also

awk(1), ed(1), grep(1), tr(1), perlre(1), sed.info, any of various books on sed, the sed FAQ (http://sed.sf.net/grabbag/tutorials/sedfaq.txt), http://sed.sf.net/grabbag/.

The full documentation for sed is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info and sed programs are properly installed at your site, the command

info sed
should give you access to the complete manual.

Referenced By

bbe(1), cpuset(7), dialrules(5), fetchlog(1), flowdumper(1), formail(1), iostat2pcp(1), ksh(1), libarchive-formats(5), med(1), mk-configure(7), mksh(1), nawk(1), nc(1), pagermap(5), rpl(1), rubibtex(1), rumakeindex(1), virt-edit(1), zipinfo(1)

Filed Under: Linux, Man Pages

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