Sed
- The correct title of this article is sed. The initial letter is capitalized due to technical restrictions.
sed (which stands for Stream EDitor) is a simple but powerful command line tool (or scripting language) used to apply various pre-specified textual transformations to a sequential stream of text data. It reads input files line by line, edits each line according to rules specified in its simple language (the sed script), and then outputs the line.
Contents
Functions
sed is often thought of as a non-interactive text editor. It differs from conventional text editors in that the processing of the two inputs is inverted. Instead of iterating once through a list of edit commands applying each one to the whole text file in memory, sed iterates once through the text file applying the whole list of edit commands to each line. Because only one line at a time is in memory, sed can process text files with an arbitrarily-large number of lines. Some implementations of sed can only process lines of limited lengths.
sed's command set is modeled after the ed editor, and most commands work similarly in this inverted paradigm. For example, the command 25d means if this is line 25, then delete (don't output) it, rather than go to line 25 and delete it as it does in ed. The notable exceptions are the copy and move commands, which span a range of lines and thus don't have straightforward equivalents in sed. Instead, sed introduces an extra buffer called the hold space, and additional commands to manipulate it. The ed command to copy line 25 to line 76 (25t76) for example would be coded as two separate commands in sed (25h; 76g), to store the line in the hold space until the point at which it should be retrieved.
Usage
The following example shows a typical usage of sed, where the -e option indicates that the sed expression follows:
sed -e 's/oldstuff/newstuff/g' inputFileName > outputFileName
The s stands for substitute; the g stands for global, which means that all matching occurrences in the line would be replaced. After the first slash is the regular expression to search for and after the second slash is the expression to replace it with. The substitute command (s///) is by far the most powerful and most commonly used sed command.
sed is often used as a filter in a pipeline:
generate_data | sed -e 's/x/y/'
That is, generate the data, but make the small change of replacing x with y.
Several substitutions or other commands can be put together in a file called, for example, subst.sed and then be applied using the -f option to read the commands from the file:
sed -f subst.sed inputFileName > outputFileName
Besides substitution, other forms of simple processing are possible. For example, the following deletes empty lines or lines that only contain spaces:
sed -e '/^ *$/d' inputFileName
This example used some of the following regular expression metacharacters:
- The caret (
^
) matches the beginning of the line. - The dollar sign (
$
) matches the end of the line. - The period (
.
) matches any single character. - The asterisk (
*
) matches zero or more occurrences of the previous character. - A bracketed expression delimited by
[
and]
matches any of the characters inside the brackets.
Complex sed constructs are possible, to the extent that it can be conceived of as a highly specialised, albeit simple, programming language. Flow of control, for example, can be managed by use of a label (a colon followed by a string which is to be the label name) and the branch instruction b; an instruction b followed by a valid label name will move processing to the block following the label; if the label does not exist then the branch will end the script.
History
sed is one of the very early Unix commands that permitted command line processing of data files. It evolved as the natural successor to the popular grep command. Cousin to the later AWK, sed allowed powerful and interesting data processing to be done by shell scripts. Sed was probably the earliest Unix tool that really encouraged regular expressions to be used ubiquitously. In terms of speed of operation, sed is generally faster than perl in execution and markedly faster than AWK.
sed and AWK are often cited as the progenitors and inspiration for Perl; in particular the s/// syntax from the example above is part of Perl's syntax.
sed's language does not have variables and has only primitive GOTO and branching functionality; nevertheless, the language is Turing-complete.
GNU sed includes several new features such as in-place editing of files (i.e., replace the original file with the result of applying the sed program). In-place editing is often used instead of ed (UNIX) scripts: for example,
sed -i 's/abc/def/' file
can be used instead of
ed file 1,$ s/abc/def/ w q
There is an extended version of sed called Super-sed (ssed) that includes regular expressions compatible with Perl.
Samples
This example will enable sed, which usually only works on one line, to remove newlines from sentences where the second sentence starts with one space.
Consider the following text:
This is my cat my cat's name is betty This is my dog my dog's name is frank
The sed script below will turn it into:
This is my cat my cat's name is betty This is my dog my dog's name is frank
Here's the script:
sed 'N;s/\n / /;P;D;'
- (N) add the next line to the work buffer
- (s) substitute
- (/\n /) match: \n and one space
- (/ /) replace with: one space
- (P) print the top line of the work buffer
- (D) delete the top line from the work buffer and run the script again
The Address Command (submatches)
More complex substitutions are possible using the "Address" command:
/pattern1/s/pattern2/replacement/flags
- will replace pattern2 with replacement where pattern1 is matched.
Likewise:
/pattern1/!s/pattern2/replacement/flags
- will replace pattern2 where pattern1 is *not* matched.
For example, if you have a file (text.txt) containing the following lines:
Hello world. Hello world. I love sed.
And you want to replace "world" with "mom", but only on those lines that contain the word "sed", you can use:
sed -e '/^.*sed.*$/s/world/mom/g' text.txt
will result in:
Hello world. Hello mom. I love sed.
You can negate this behavior with:
sed -e '/^.*sed.*$/!s/world/mom/g' text.txt
which will result in the opposite:
Hello mom. Hello world. I love sed.
SED emulating UNIX commands
Note: by Aurélio Marinho Jargas
UNIX | SED -------------+---------------------------------------------------------------- cat | sed ':' cat -s | sed '/./,/^$/!d' tac | sed '1!G;h;$!d' grep | sed '/patt/!d' grep -v | sed '/patt/d' head | sed '10q' head -1 | sed 'q' tail | sed -e ':a' -e '$q;N;11,$D;ba' tail -1 | sed '$!d' tail -f | sed -u '/./!d' cut -c 10 | sed 's/\(.\)\{10\}.*/\1/' cut -d: -f4 | sed 's/\(\([^:]*\):\)\{4\}.*/\2/' tr A-Z a-z | sed 'y/ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz/' tr a-z A-Z | sed 'y/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz/ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ/' tr -s ' ' | sed 's/ \+/ /g' tr -d '\012' | sed 'H;$!d;g;s/\n//g' wc -l | sed -n '$=' uniq | sed 'N;/^\(.*\)\n\1$/!P;D' rev | sed '/\n/!G;s/\(.\)\(.*\n\)/&\2\1/;//D;s/.//' basename | sed 's,.*/,,' dirname | sed 's,[^/]*$,,' xargs | sed -e ':a' -e '$!N;s/\n/ /;ta' paste -sd: | sed -e ':a' -e '$!N;s/\n/:/;ta' cat -n | sed '=' | sed '$!N;s/\n/ /' grep -n | sed -n '/patt/{=;p;}' | sed '$!N;s/\n/:/' cp orig new | sed 'w new' orig
Further reading
- A very basic introduction
- The sed FAQ
- GNU sed manual
- Manual page for sed version 4.1.2, the program's manpage