How can I use sed to get an xml value - linux

How can I use sed to get the SOMETHING in <version.suffix>SOMETHING</version.suffix>?
I tried sed 's#.*>\(.*\)\<version\.suffix\>#\1#' ,but fails.

Try this one:
sed 's/<.*>\(.*\)<.*>/\1/'
It should be general enough to get every xml value.
If you need to eliminate the indentation add \s* at the beginning like this:
sed 's/\s*<.*>\(.*\)<.*>/\1/'
Alternatively if you only want version.suffix's value, you can make the command more specific like this:
sed 's/<version\.suffix>\(.*\)<.*>/\1/'

You could use the below sed command,
$ echo '<version.suffix>SOMETHING</version.suffix>' | sed 's#^<[^>]*>\(.*\)<\/[^>]*>$#\1#'
SOMETHING
^<[^>]*> Matches the first tag string <version.suffix>.
\(.*\)<\/[^>]*>$ Characters upto the next closing tag are captured. And the remaining closing tag was matched by this <\/[^>]*> regex.
Finally all the matched characters are replaced by the characters which are present inside the group index 1.
Your regex is correct but the only thing is, you forget to use / inside the closing tag.
$ echo '<version.suffix>SOMETHING</version.suffix>' | sed 's#.*>\(.*\)</version\.suffix>#\1#'
|<-Here
SOMETHING

Many ways possible, e.g:
with sed
echo '<version.suffix>SOMETHING</version.suffix>' | sed 's#<[^>]*>##g'
or grep
echo '<version.suffix>SOMETHING</version.suffix>' | grep -oP '<version.suffix>\KSOMETHING(?=</version.suffix>)'

Assuming the formatting of the question is accurate, when I run the example in the question as-is:
$ echo '<version.suffix>SOMETHING</version.suffix>' | sed 's#.*>\(.*\)\<version\.suffix\>#\1#'
I see the following output:
SOMETHING</>
In case my formatting skills fail me, this output ends with the trailing left angle bracket, a forward slash, and finally the right angle bracket.
So, why this "failure"? Well, on my system (Linux with GNU grep 2.14), grep(1) includes the following snippet:
The Backslash Character and Special Expressions
The symbols \< and \> respectively match the empty string at the beginning and end of a word.
Other answers suggest good alternatives to extract the value in XML tag syntax; use them.
I just wanted to point out why the RE in the original problem fails on current Linux systems: some symbols match no actual characters, but instead match empty boundaries in these apps that support posix-extended regular expressions. So, in this example, the brackets in the source are matched in unexpected ways:
the (.*)has matched SOMETHING</, to be printed by the \1 back-reference
the left-hand side of version.suffix is matched by \<
version.suffix is matched by version\.suffix
the right-hand side of version.suffix is matched by \>
the trailing > character remains in sed's pattern space and is printed.
TL;DR -"\X" does not mean "just match an X" for all X!

Related

Linux sed command to add text between first 2 | [duplicate]

I'm trying to use sed to clean up lines of URLs to extract just the domain.
So from:
http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/
I want:
http://www.suepearson.co.uk/
(either with or without the trailing slash, it doesn't matter)
I have tried:
sed 's|\(http:\/\/.*?\/\).*|\1|'
and (escaping the non-greedy quantifier)
sed 's|\(http:\/\/.*\?\/\).*|\1|'
but I can not seem to get the non-greedy quantifier (?) to work, so it always ends up matching the whole string.
Neither basic nor extended Posix/GNU regex recognizes the non-greedy quantifier; you need a later regex. Fortunately, Perl regex for this context is pretty easy to get:
perl -pe 's|(http://.*?/).*|\1|'
In this specific case, you can get the job done without using a non-greedy regex.
Try this non-greedy regex [^/]* instead of .*?:
sed 's|\(http://[^/]*/\).*|\1|g'
With sed, I usually implement non-greedy search by searching for anything except the separator until the separator :
echo "http://www.suon.co.uk/product/1/7/3/" | sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*\)/.*;\1;p'
Output:
http://www.suon.co.uk
this is:
don't output -n
search, match pattern, replace and print s/<pattern>/<replace>/p
use ; search command separator instead of / to make it easier to type so s;<pattern>;<replace>;p
remember match between brackets \( ... \), later accessible with \1,\2...
match http://
followed by anything in brackets [], [ab/] would mean either a or b or /
first ^ in [] means not, so followed by anything but the thing in the []
so [^/] means anything except / character
* is to repeat previous group so [^/]* means characters except /.
so far sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*\) means search and remember http://followed by any characters except / and remember what you've found
we want to search untill the end of domain so stop on the next / so add another / at the end: sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*\)/' but we want to match the rest of the line after the domain so add .*
now the match remembered in group 1 (\1) is the domain so replace matched line with stuff saved in group \1 and print: sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*\)/.*;\1;p'
If you want to include backslash after the domain as well, then add one more backslash in the group to remember:
echo "http://www.suon.co.uk/product/1/7/3/" | sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*/\).*;\1;p'
output:
http://www.suon.co.uk/
Simulating lazy (un-greedy) quantifier in sed
And all other regex flavors!
Finding first occurrence of an expression:
POSIX ERE (using -r option)
Regex:
(EXPRESSION).*|.
Sed:
sed -r ‍'s/(EXPRESSION).*|./\1/g' # Global `g` modifier should be on
Example (finding first sequence of digits) Live demo:
$ sed -r 's/([0-9]+).*|./\1/g' <<< 'foo 12 bar 34'
12
How does it work?
This regex benefits from an alternation |. At each position engine tries to pick the longest match (this is a POSIX standard which is followed by couple of other engines as well) which means it goes with . until a match is found for ([0-9]+).*. But order is important too.
Since global flag is set, engine tries to continue matching character by character up to the end of input string or our target. As soon as the first and only capturing group of left side of alternation is matched (EXPRESSION) rest of line is consumed immediately as well .*. We now hold our value in the first capturing group.
POSIX BRE
Regex:
\(\(\(EXPRESSION\).*\)*.\)*
Sed:
sed 's/\(\(\(EXPRESSION\).*\)*.\)*/\3/'
Example (finding first sequence of digits):
$ sed 's/\(\(\([0-9]\{1,\}\).*\)*.\)*/\3/' <<< 'foo 12 bar 34'
12
This one is like ERE version but with no alternation involved. That's all. At each single position engine tries to match a digit.
If it is found, other following digits are consumed and captured and the rest of line is matched immediately otherwise since * means
more or zero it skips over second capturing group \(\([0-9]\{1,\}\).*\)* and arrives at a dot . to match a single character and this process continues.
Finding first occurrence of a delimited expression:
This approach will match the very first occurrence of a string that is delimited. We can call it a block of string.
sed 's/\(END-DELIMITER-EXPRESSION\).*/\1/; \
s/\(\(START-DELIMITER-EXPRESSION.*\)*.\)*/\1/g'
Input string:
foobar start block #1 end barfoo start block #2 end
-EDE: end
-SDE: start
$ sed 's/\(end\).*/\1/; s/\(\(start.*\)*.\)*/\1/g'
Output:
start block #1 end
First regex \(end\).* matches and captures first end delimiter end and substitues all match with recent captured characters which
is the end delimiter. At this stage our output is: foobar start block #1 end.
Then the result is passed to second regex \(\(start.*\)*.\)* that is same as POSIX BRE version above. It matches a single character
if start delimiter start is not matched otherwise it matches and captures the start delimiter and matches the rest of characters.
Directly answering your question
Using approach #2 (delimited expression) you should select two appropriate expressions:
EDE: [^:/]\/
SDE: http:
Usage:
$ sed 's/\([^:/]\/\).*/\1/g; s/\(\(http:.*\)*.\)*/\1/' <<< 'http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/'
Output:
http://www.suepearson.co.uk/
Note: this will not work with identical delimiters.
sed does not support "non greedy" operator.
You have to use "[]" operator to exclude "/" from match.
sed 's,\(http://[^/]*\)/.*,\1,'
P.S. there is no need to backslash "/".
sed - non greedy matching by Christoph Sieghart
The trick to get non greedy matching in sed is to match all characters excluding the one that terminates the match. I know, a no-brainer, but I wasted precious minutes on it and shell scripts should be, after all, quick and easy. So in case somebody else might need it:
Greedy matching
% echo "<b>foo</b>bar" | sed 's/<.*>//g'
bar
Non greedy matching
% echo "<b>foo</b>bar" | sed 's/<[^>]*>//g'
foobar
Non-greedy solution for more than a single character
This thread is really old but I assume people still needs it.
Lets say you want to kill everything till the very first occurrence of HELLO. You cannot say [^HELLO]...
So a nice solution involves two steps, assuming that you can spare a unique word that you are not expecting in the input, say top_sekrit.
In this case we can:
s/HELLO/top_sekrit/ #will only replace the very first occurrence
s/.*top_sekrit// #kill everything till end of the first HELLO
Of course, with a simpler input you could use a smaller word, or maybe even a single character.
HTH!
This can be done using cut:
echo "http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/" | cut -d'/' -f1-3
another way, not using regex, is to use fields/delimiter method eg
string="http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/"
echo $string | awk -F"/" '{print $1,$2,$3}' OFS="/"
sed certainly has its place but this not not one of them !
As Dee has pointed out: Just use cut. It is far simpler and much more safe in this case. Here's an example where we extract various components from the URL using Bash syntax:
url="http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/"
protocol=$(echo "$url" | cut -d':' -f1)
host=$(echo "$url" | cut -d'/' -f3)
urlhost=$(echo "$url" | cut -d'/' -f1-3)
urlpath=$(echo "$url" | cut -d'/' -f4-)
gives you:
protocol = "http"
host = "www.suepearson.co.uk"
urlhost = "http://www.suepearson.co.uk"
urlpath = "product/174/71/3816/"
As you can see this is a lot more flexible approach.
(all credit to Dee)
sed 's|(http:\/\/[^\/]+\/).*|\1|'
There is still hope to solve this using pure (GNU) sed. Despite this is not a generic solution in some cases you can use "loops" to eliminate all the unnecessary parts of the string like this:
sed -r -e ":loop" -e 's|(http://.+)/.*|\1|' -e "t loop"
-r: Use extended regex (for + and unescaped parenthesis)
":loop": Define a new label named "loop"
-e: add commands to sed
"t loop": Jump back to label "loop" if there was a successful substitution
The only problem here is it will also cut the last separator character ('/'), but if you really need it you can still simply put it back after the "loop" finished, just append this additional command at the end of the previous command line:
-e "s,$,/,"
sed -E interprets regular expressions as extended (modern) regular expressions
Update: -E on MacOS X, -r in GNU sed.
Because you specifically stated you're trying to use sed (instead of perl, cut, etc.), try grouping. This circumvents the non-greedy identifier potentially not being recognized. The first group is the protocol (i.e. 'http://', 'https://', 'tcp://', etc). The second group is the domain:
echo "http://www.suon.co.uk/product/1/7/3/" | sed "s|^\(.*//\)\([^/]*\).*$|\1\2|"
If you're not familiar with grouping, start here.
I realize this is an old entry, but someone may find it useful.
As the full domain name may not exceed a total length of 253 characters replace .* with .\{1, 255\}
This is how to robustly do non-greedy matching of multi-character strings using sed. Lets say you want to change every foo...bar to <foo...bar> so for example this input:
$ cat file
ABC foo DEF bar GHI foo KLM bar NOP foo QRS bar TUV
should become this output:
ABC <foo DEF bar> GHI <foo KLM bar> NOP <foo QRS bar> TUV
To do that you convert foo and bar to individual characters and then use the negation of those characters between them:
$ sed 's/#/#A/g; s/{/#B/g; s/}/#C/g; s/foo/{/g; s/bar/}/g; s/{[^{}]*}/<&>/g; s/}/bar/g; s/{/foo/g; s/#C/}/g; s/#B/{/g; s/#A/#/g' file
ABC <foo DEF bar> GHI <foo KLM bar> NOP <foo QRS bar> TUV
In the above:
s/#/#A/g; s/{/#B/g; s/}/#C/g is converting { and } to placeholder strings that cannot exist in the input so those chars then are available to convert foo and bar to.
s/foo/{/g; s/bar/}/g is converting foo and bar to { and } respectively
s/{[^{}]*}/<&>/g is performing the op we want - converting foo...bar to <foo...bar>
s/}/bar/g; s/{/foo/g is converting { and } back to foo and bar.
s/#C/}/g; s/#B/{/g; s/#A/#/g is converting the placeholder strings back to their original characters.
Note that the above does not rely on any particular string not being present in the input as it manufactures such strings in the first step, nor does it care which occurrence of any particular regexp you want to match since you can use {[^{}]*} as many times as necessary in the expression to isolate the actual match you want and/or with seds numeric match operator, e.g. to only replace the 2nd occurrence:
$ sed 's/#/#A/g; s/{/#B/g; s/}/#C/g; s/foo/{/g; s/bar/}/g; s/{[^{}]*}/<&>/2; s/}/bar/g; s/{/foo/g; s/#C/}/g; s/#B/{/g; s/#A/#/g' file
ABC foo DEF bar GHI <foo KLM bar> NOP foo QRS bar TUV
Have not yet seen this answer, so here's how you can do this with vi or vim:
vi -c '%s/\(http:\/\/.\{-}\/\).*/\1/ge | wq' file &>/dev/null
This runs the vi :%s substitution globally (the trailing g), refrains from raising an error if the pattern is not found (e), then saves the resulting changes to disk and quits. The &>/dev/null prevents the GUI from briefly flashing on screen, which can be annoying.
I like using vi sometimes for super complicated regexes, because (1) perl is dead dying, (2) vim has a very advanced regex engine, and (3) I'm already intimately familiar with vi regexes in my day-to-day usage editing documents.
Since PCRE is also tagged here, we could use GNU grep by using non-lazy match in regex .*? which will match first nearest match opposite of .*(which is really greedy and goes till last occurrence of match).
grep -oP '^http[s]?:\/\/.*?/' Input_file
Explanation: using grep's oP options here where -P is responsible for enabling PCRE regex here. In main program of grep mentioning regex which is matching starting http/https followed by :// till next occurrence of / since we have used .*? it will look for first / after (http/https://). It will print matched part only in line.
echo "/home/one/two/three/myfile.txt" | sed 's|\(.*\)/.*|\1|'
don bother, i got it on another forum :)
sed 's|\(http:\/\/www\.[a-z.0-9]*\/\).*|\1| works too
Here is something you can do with a two step approach and awk:
A=http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/
echo $A|awk '
{
var=gensub(///,"||",3,$0) ;
sub(/\|\|.*/,"",var);
print var
}'
Output:
http://www.suepearson.co.uk
Hope that helps!
Another sed version:
sed 's|/[:alnum:].*||' file.txt
It matches / followed by an alphanumeric character (so not another forward slash) as well as the rest of characters till the end of the line. Afterwards it replaces it with nothing (ie. deletes it.)
#Daniel H (concerning your comment on andcoz' answer, although long time ago): deleting trailing zeros works with
s,([[:digit:]]\.[[:digit:]]*[1-9])[0]*$,\1,g
it's about clearly defining the matching conditions ...
You should also think about the case where there is no matching delims. Do you want to output the line or not. My examples here do not output anything if there is no match.
You need prefix up to 3rd /, so select two times string of any length not containing / and following / and then string of any length not containing / and then match / following any string and then print selection. This idea works with any single char delims.
echo http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/ | \
sed -nr 's,(([^/]*/){2}[^/]*)/.*,\1,p'
Using sed commands you can do fast prefix dropping or delim selection, like:
echo 'aaa #cee: { "foo":" #cee: " }' | \
sed -r 't x;s/ #cee: /\n/;D;:x'
This is lot faster than eating char at a time.
Jump to label if successful match previously. Add \n at / before 1st delim. Remove up to first \n. If \n was added, jump to end and print.
If there is start and end delims, it is just easy to remove end delims until you reach the nth-2 element you want and then do D trick, remove after end delim, jump to delete if no match, remove before start delim and and print. This only works if start/end delims occur in pairs.
echo 'foobar start block #1 end barfoo start block #2 end bazfoo start block #3 end goo start block #4 end faa' | \
sed -r 't x;s/end//;s/end/\n/;D;:x;s/(end).*/\1/;T y;s/.*(start)/\1/;p;:y;d'
If you have access to gnu grep, then can utilize perl regex:
grep -Po '^https?://([^/]+)(?=)' <<< 'http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/'
http://www.suepearson.co.uk
Alternatively, to get everything after the domain use
grep -Po '^https?://([^/]+)\K.*' <<< 'http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/'
/product/174/71/3816/
The following solution works for matching / working with multiply present (chained; tandem; compound) HTML or other tags. For example, I wanted to edit HTML code to remove <span> tags, that appeared in tandem.
Issue: regular sed regex expressions greedily matched over all the tags from the first to the last.
Solution: non-greedy pattern matching (per discussions elsewhere in this thread; e.g. https://stackoverflow.com/a/46719361/1904943).
Example:
echo '<span>Will</span>This <span>remove</span>will <span>this.</span>remain.' | \
sed 's/<span>[^>]*>//g' ; echo
This will remain.
Explanation:
s/<span> : find <span>
[^>] : followed by anything that is not >
*> : until you find >
//g : replace any such strings present with nothing.
Addendum
I was trying to clean up URLs, but I was running into difficulty matching / excluding a word - href - using the approach above. I briefly looked at negative lookarounds (Regular expression to match a line that doesn't contain a word) but that approach seemed overly complex and did not provide a satisfactory solution.
I decided to replace href with ` (backtick), do the regex substitutions, then replace ` with href.
Example (formatted here for readability):
printf '\n
<a aaa h href="apple">apple</a>
<a bbb "c=ccc" href="banana">banana</a>
<a class="gtm-content-click"
data-vars-link-text="nope"
data-vars-click-url="https://blablabla"
data-vars-event-category="story"
data-vars-sub-category="story"
data-vars-item="in_content_link"
data-vars-link-text
href="https:example.com">Example.com</a>\n\n' |
sed 's/href/`/g ;
s/<a[^`]*`/\n<a href/g'
apple
banana
Example.com
Explanation: basically as above. Here,
s/href/` : replace href with ` (backtick)
s/<a : find start of URL
[^`] : followed by anything that is not ` (backtick)
*` : until you find a `
/<a href/g : replace each of those found with <a href
Unfortunately, as mentioned, this it is not supported in sed.
To overcome this, I suggest to use the next best thing(actually better even), to use vim sed-like capabilities.
define in .bash-profile
vimdo() { vim $2 --not-a-term -c "$1" -es +"w >> /dev/stdout" -cq! ; }
That will create headless vim to execute a command.
Now you can do for example:
echo $PATH | vimdo "%s_\c:[a-zA-Z0-9\\/]\{-}python[a-zA-Z0-9\\/]\{-}:__g" -
to filter out python in $PATH.
Use - to have input from pipe in vimdo.
While most of the syntax is the same. Vim features more advanced features, and using \{-} is standard for non-greedy match. see help regexp.

sed doesn't replace variable

I'm trying to replace some regex line in a apache file.
i define:
OLD1="[0-9]*.[0-9]+"
NEW1="[a-z]*.[0-9]"
when i'm executing:
sed -i 's/$OLD1/$NEW1/g' demo.conf
there's no change.
This is what i tried to do
sed -i "s/${OLD1}/${NEW1}/g" 001-kms.conf
sed -i "s/"$OLD1"/"$NEW1"/g" 001-kms.conf
sed -i "s~${OLD1}~${NEW1}~g" 001-kms.conf
i'm expecting that the new file will replace $OLD1 with $NEW1
OLD1="[0-9]*.[0-9]+"
Because the [ * . are all characters with special meaning in sed, we need to escape them. For such simple case something like this could work:
OLD2=$(<<<"$OLD1" sed 's/[][\*\.]/\\&/g')
It will set OLD2 to \[0-9\]\*\.\[0-9\]+. Note that it doesn't handle all the possible cases, like OLD1='\.\[' will convert to OLD2='\\.\\[ which means something different. Implementing a proper regex to properly escape, well, other regex I leave as an exercise to others.
Now you can:
sed "s/$OLD2/$NEW1/g"
Tested with:
OLD1="[0-9]*.[0-9]+"
NEW1="[a-z]*.[0-9]"
sed "s/$(sed 's/[][\*\.]/\\&/g' <<<"$OLD1")/$NEW1/g" <<<'XYZ="[0-9]*.[0-9]+"'
will output:
XYZ="[a-z]*.[0-9]"
you need matching on exact string
You would need something that can match on exact string [0-9]*.[0-9]+ which sed does not support well.
Therefore instead I am using this pipeline replacing one character at a time (it also is easier to read I think):echo "[0-9]*.[0-9]+" | sed 's/0/a/' | sed 's/9/z/' | sed 's/+//'
You would have to cat your files or use find with execute to then apply this pipe.
I had tried following (from other SO answers):
- sed 's/\<exact_string/>/replacement/'doesn't work as \< and \> are left and right word boundaries respectively.
- sed 's/(CB)?exact_string/replacement/'found in one answer but nowhere in documentation
I used Win 10 bash, git bash, and online Linux tools with the same results.
when I thought matching was on the pattern rather than exact string
Replacement cannot be a regex - at most it can reference parts of the regex expression which matched. From man sed:
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.
Additionally you have to escape some characters in your regex (specifically . and +) unless you add option -E for extended regex as per comment under your question. (N.B. only if you want to match on the full-stop . rather than it meaning any character)
$ echo "01.234--ZZZ" | sed 's/[0-9]*\.[0-9]\+/REPLACEMENT/g'
REPLACEMENT--ZZZ

Sed: How to replace multiple times per line with wildcard? [duplicate]

I'm trying to use sed to clean up lines of URLs to extract just the domain.
So from:
http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/
I want:
http://www.suepearson.co.uk/
(either with or without the trailing slash, it doesn't matter)
I have tried:
sed 's|\(http:\/\/.*?\/\).*|\1|'
and (escaping the non-greedy quantifier)
sed 's|\(http:\/\/.*\?\/\).*|\1|'
but I can not seem to get the non-greedy quantifier (?) to work, so it always ends up matching the whole string.
Neither basic nor extended Posix/GNU regex recognizes the non-greedy quantifier; you need a later regex. Fortunately, Perl regex for this context is pretty easy to get:
perl -pe 's|(http://.*?/).*|\1|'
In this specific case, you can get the job done without using a non-greedy regex.
Try this non-greedy regex [^/]* instead of .*?:
sed 's|\(http://[^/]*/\).*|\1|g'
With sed, I usually implement non-greedy search by searching for anything except the separator until the separator :
echo "http://www.suon.co.uk/product/1/7/3/" | sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*\)/.*;\1;p'
Output:
http://www.suon.co.uk
this is:
don't output -n
search, match pattern, replace and print s/<pattern>/<replace>/p
use ; search command separator instead of / to make it easier to type so s;<pattern>;<replace>;p
remember match between brackets \( ... \), later accessible with \1,\2...
match http://
followed by anything in brackets [], [ab/] would mean either a or b or /
first ^ in [] means not, so followed by anything but the thing in the []
so [^/] means anything except / character
* is to repeat previous group so [^/]* means characters except /.
so far sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*\) means search and remember http://followed by any characters except / and remember what you've found
we want to search untill the end of domain so stop on the next / so add another / at the end: sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*\)/' but we want to match the rest of the line after the domain so add .*
now the match remembered in group 1 (\1) is the domain so replace matched line with stuff saved in group \1 and print: sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*\)/.*;\1;p'
If you want to include backslash after the domain as well, then add one more backslash in the group to remember:
echo "http://www.suon.co.uk/product/1/7/3/" | sed -n 's;\(http://[^/]*/\).*;\1;p'
output:
http://www.suon.co.uk/
Simulating lazy (un-greedy) quantifier in sed
And all other regex flavors!
Finding first occurrence of an expression:
POSIX ERE (using -r option)
Regex:
(EXPRESSION).*|.
Sed:
sed -r ‍'s/(EXPRESSION).*|./\1/g' # Global `g` modifier should be on
Example (finding first sequence of digits) Live demo:
$ sed -r 's/([0-9]+).*|./\1/g' <<< 'foo 12 bar 34'
12
How does it work?
This regex benefits from an alternation |. At each position engine tries to pick the longest match (this is a POSIX standard which is followed by couple of other engines as well) which means it goes with . until a match is found for ([0-9]+).*. But order is important too.
Since global flag is set, engine tries to continue matching character by character up to the end of input string or our target. As soon as the first and only capturing group of left side of alternation is matched (EXPRESSION) rest of line is consumed immediately as well .*. We now hold our value in the first capturing group.
POSIX BRE
Regex:
\(\(\(EXPRESSION\).*\)*.\)*
Sed:
sed 's/\(\(\(EXPRESSION\).*\)*.\)*/\3/'
Example (finding first sequence of digits):
$ sed 's/\(\(\([0-9]\{1,\}\).*\)*.\)*/\3/' <<< 'foo 12 bar 34'
12
This one is like ERE version but with no alternation involved. That's all. At each single position engine tries to match a digit.
If it is found, other following digits are consumed and captured and the rest of line is matched immediately otherwise since * means
more or zero it skips over second capturing group \(\([0-9]\{1,\}\).*\)* and arrives at a dot . to match a single character and this process continues.
Finding first occurrence of a delimited expression:
This approach will match the very first occurrence of a string that is delimited. We can call it a block of string.
sed 's/\(END-DELIMITER-EXPRESSION\).*/\1/; \
s/\(\(START-DELIMITER-EXPRESSION.*\)*.\)*/\1/g'
Input string:
foobar start block #1 end barfoo start block #2 end
-EDE: end
-SDE: start
$ sed 's/\(end\).*/\1/; s/\(\(start.*\)*.\)*/\1/g'
Output:
start block #1 end
First regex \(end\).* matches and captures first end delimiter end and substitues all match with recent captured characters which
is the end delimiter. At this stage our output is: foobar start block #1 end.
Then the result is passed to second regex \(\(start.*\)*.\)* that is same as POSIX BRE version above. It matches a single character
if start delimiter start is not matched otherwise it matches and captures the start delimiter and matches the rest of characters.
Directly answering your question
Using approach #2 (delimited expression) you should select two appropriate expressions:
EDE: [^:/]\/
SDE: http:
Usage:
$ sed 's/\([^:/]\/\).*/\1/g; s/\(\(http:.*\)*.\)*/\1/' <<< 'http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/'
Output:
http://www.suepearson.co.uk/
Note: this will not work with identical delimiters.
sed does not support "non greedy" operator.
You have to use "[]" operator to exclude "/" from match.
sed 's,\(http://[^/]*\)/.*,\1,'
P.S. there is no need to backslash "/".
sed - non greedy matching by Christoph Sieghart
The trick to get non greedy matching in sed is to match all characters excluding the one that terminates the match. I know, a no-brainer, but I wasted precious minutes on it and shell scripts should be, after all, quick and easy. So in case somebody else might need it:
Greedy matching
% echo "<b>foo</b>bar" | sed 's/<.*>//g'
bar
Non greedy matching
% echo "<b>foo</b>bar" | sed 's/<[^>]*>//g'
foobar
Non-greedy solution for more than a single character
This thread is really old but I assume people still needs it.
Lets say you want to kill everything till the very first occurrence of HELLO. You cannot say [^HELLO]...
So a nice solution involves two steps, assuming that you can spare a unique word that you are not expecting in the input, say top_sekrit.
In this case we can:
s/HELLO/top_sekrit/ #will only replace the very first occurrence
s/.*top_sekrit// #kill everything till end of the first HELLO
Of course, with a simpler input you could use a smaller word, or maybe even a single character.
HTH!
This can be done using cut:
echo "http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/" | cut -d'/' -f1-3
another way, not using regex, is to use fields/delimiter method eg
string="http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/"
echo $string | awk -F"/" '{print $1,$2,$3}' OFS="/"
sed certainly has its place but this not not one of them !
As Dee has pointed out: Just use cut. It is far simpler and much more safe in this case. Here's an example where we extract various components from the URL using Bash syntax:
url="http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/"
protocol=$(echo "$url" | cut -d':' -f1)
host=$(echo "$url" | cut -d'/' -f3)
urlhost=$(echo "$url" | cut -d'/' -f1-3)
urlpath=$(echo "$url" | cut -d'/' -f4-)
gives you:
protocol = "http"
host = "www.suepearson.co.uk"
urlhost = "http://www.suepearson.co.uk"
urlpath = "product/174/71/3816/"
As you can see this is a lot more flexible approach.
(all credit to Dee)
sed 's|(http:\/\/[^\/]+\/).*|\1|'
There is still hope to solve this using pure (GNU) sed. Despite this is not a generic solution in some cases you can use "loops" to eliminate all the unnecessary parts of the string like this:
sed -r -e ":loop" -e 's|(http://.+)/.*|\1|' -e "t loop"
-r: Use extended regex (for + and unescaped parenthesis)
":loop": Define a new label named "loop"
-e: add commands to sed
"t loop": Jump back to label "loop" if there was a successful substitution
The only problem here is it will also cut the last separator character ('/'), but if you really need it you can still simply put it back after the "loop" finished, just append this additional command at the end of the previous command line:
-e "s,$,/,"
sed -E interprets regular expressions as extended (modern) regular expressions
Update: -E on MacOS X, -r in GNU sed.
Because you specifically stated you're trying to use sed (instead of perl, cut, etc.), try grouping. This circumvents the non-greedy identifier potentially not being recognized. The first group is the protocol (i.e. 'http://', 'https://', 'tcp://', etc). The second group is the domain:
echo "http://www.suon.co.uk/product/1/7/3/" | sed "s|^\(.*//\)\([^/]*\).*$|\1\2|"
If you're not familiar with grouping, start here.
I realize this is an old entry, but someone may find it useful.
As the full domain name may not exceed a total length of 253 characters replace .* with .\{1, 255\}
This is how to robustly do non-greedy matching of multi-character strings using sed. Lets say you want to change every foo...bar to <foo...bar> so for example this input:
$ cat file
ABC foo DEF bar GHI foo KLM bar NOP foo QRS bar TUV
should become this output:
ABC <foo DEF bar> GHI <foo KLM bar> NOP <foo QRS bar> TUV
To do that you convert foo and bar to individual characters and then use the negation of those characters between them:
$ sed 's/#/#A/g; s/{/#B/g; s/}/#C/g; s/foo/{/g; s/bar/}/g; s/{[^{}]*}/<&>/g; s/}/bar/g; s/{/foo/g; s/#C/}/g; s/#B/{/g; s/#A/#/g' file
ABC <foo DEF bar> GHI <foo KLM bar> NOP <foo QRS bar> TUV
In the above:
s/#/#A/g; s/{/#B/g; s/}/#C/g is converting { and } to placeholder strings that cannot exist in the input so those chars then are available to convert foo and bar to.
s/foo/{/g; s/bar/}/g is converting foo and bar to { and } respectively
s/{[^{}]*}/<&>/g is performing the op we want - converting foo...bar to <foo...bar>
s/}/bar/g; s/{/foo/g is converting { and } back to foo and bar.
s/#C/}/g; s/#B/{/g; s/#A/#/g is converting the placeholder strings back to their original characters.
Note that the above does not rely on any particular string not being present in the input as it manufactures such strings in the first step, nor does it care which occurrence of any particular regexp you want to match since you can use {[^{}]*} as many times as necessary in the expression to isolate the actual match you want and/or with seds numeric match operator, e.g. to only replace the 2nd occurrence:
$ sed 's/#/#A/g; s/{/#B/g; s/}/#C/g; s/foo/{/g; s/bar/}/g; s/{[^{}]*}/<&>/2; s/}/bar/g; s/{/foo/g; s/#C/}/g; s/#B/{/g; s/#A/#/g' file
ABC foo DEF bar GHI <foo KLM bar> NOP foo QRS bar TUV
Have not yet seen this answer, so here's how you can do this with vi or vim:
vi -c '%s/\(http:\/\/.\{-}\/\).*/\1/ge | wq' file &>/dev/null
This runs the vi :%s substitution globally (the trailing g), refrains from raising an error if the pattern is not found (e), then saves the resulting changes to disk and quits. The &>/dev/null prevents the GUI from briefly flashing on screen, which can be annoying.
I like using vi sometimes for super complicated regexes, because (1) perl is dead dying, (2) vim has a very advanced regex engine, and (3) I'm already intimately familiar with vi regexes in my day-to-day usage editing documents.
Since PCRE is also tagged here, we could use GNU grep by using non-lazy match in regex .*? which will match first nearest match opposite of .*(which is really greedy and goes till last occurrence of match).
grep -oP '^http[s]?:\/\/.*?/' Input_file
Explanation: using grep's oP options here where -P is responsible for enabling PCRE regex here. In main program of grep mentioning regex which is matching starting http/https followed by :// till next occurrence of / since we have used .*? it will look for first / after (http/https://). It will print matched part only in line.
echo "/home/one/two/three/myfile.txt" | sed 's|\(.*\)/.*|\1|'
don bother, i got it on another forum :)
sed 's|\(http:\/\/www\.[a-z.0-9]*\/\).*|\1| works too
Here is something you can do with a two step approach and awk:
A=http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/
echo $A|awk '
{
var=gensub(///,"||",3,$0) ;
sub(/\|\|.*/,"",var);
print var
}'
Output:
http://www.suepearson.co.uk
Hope that helps!
Another sed version:
sed 's|/[:alnum:].*||' file.txt
It matches / followed by an alphanumeric character (so not another forward slash) as well as the rest of characters till the end of the line. Afterwards it replaces it with nothing (ie. deletes it.)
#Daniel H (concerning your comment on andcoz' answer, although long time ago): deleting trailing zeros works with
s,([[:digit:]]\.[[:digit:]]*[1-9])[0]*$,\1,g
it's about clearly defining the matching conditions ...
You should also think about the case where there is no matching delims. Do you want to output the line or not. My examples here do not output anything if there is no match.
You need prefix up to 3rd /, so select two times string of any length not containing / and following / and then string of any length not containing / and then match / following any string and then print selection. This idea works with any single char delims.
echo http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/ | \
sed -nr 's,(([^/]*/){2}[^/]*)/.*,\1,p'
Using sed commands you can do fast prefix dropping or delim selection, like:
echo 'aaa #cee: { "foo":" #cee: " }' | \
sed -r 't x;s/ #cee: /\n/;D;:x'
This is lot faster than eating char at a time.
Jump to label if successful match previously. Add \n at / before 1st delim. Remove up to first \n. If \n was added, jump to end and print.
If there is start and end delims, it is just easy to remove end delims until you reach the nth-2 element you want and then do D trick, remove after end delim, jump to delete if no match, remove before start delim and and print. This only works if start/end delims occur in pairs.
echo 'foobar start block #1 end barfoo start block #2 end bazfoo start block #3 end goo start block #4 end faa' | \
sed -r 't x;s/end//;s/end/\n/;D;:x;s/(end).*/\1/;T y;s/.*(start)/\1/;p;:y;d'
If you have access to gnu grep, then can utilize perl regex:
grep -Po '^https?://([^/]+)(?=)' <<< 'http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/'
http://www.suepearson.co.uk
Alternatively, to get everything after the domain use
grep -Po '^https?://([^/]+)\K.*' <<< 'http://www.suepearson.co.uk/product/174/71/3816/'
/product/174/71/3816/
The following solution works for matching / working with multiply present (chained; tandem; compound) HTML or other tags. For example, I wanted to edit HTML code to remove <span> tags, that appeared in tandem.
Issue: regular sed regex expressions greedily matched over all the tags from the first to the last.
Solution: non-greedy pattern matching (per discussions elsewhere in this thread; e.g. https://stackoverflow.com/a/46719361/1904943).
Example:
echo '<span>Will</span>This <span>remove</span>will <span>this.</span>remain.' | \
sed 's/<span>[^>]*>//g' ; echo
This will remain.
Explanation:
s/<span> : find <span>
[^>] : followed by anything that is not >
*> : until you find >
//g : replace any such strings present with nothing.
Addendum
I was trying to clean up URLs, but I was running into difficulty matching / excluding a word - href - using the approach above. I briefly looked at negative lookarounds (Regular expression to match a line that doesn't contain a word) but that approach seemed overly complex and did not provide a satisfactory solution.
I decided to replace href with ` (backtick), do the regex substitutions, then replace ` with href.
Example (formatted here for readability):
printf '\n
<a aaa h href="apple">apple</a>
<a bbb "c=ccc" href="banana">banana</a>
<a class="gtm-content-click"
data-vars-link-text="nope"
data-vars-click-url="https://blablabla"
data-vars-event-category="story"
data-vars-sub-category="story"
data-vars-item="in_content_link"
data-vars-link-text
href="https:example.com">Example.com</a>\n\n' |
sed 's/href/`/g ;
s/<a[^`]*`/\n<a href/g'
apple
banana
Example.com
Explanation: basically as above. Here,
s/href/` : replace href with ` (backtick)
s/<a : find start of URL
[^`] : followed by anything that is not ` (backtick)
*` : until you find a `
/<a href/g : replace each of those found with <a href
Unfortunately, as mentioned, this it is not supported in sed.
To overcome this, I suggest to use the next best thing(actually better even), to use vim sed-like capabilities.
define in .bash-profile
vimdo() { vim $2 --not-a-term -c "$1" -es +"w >> /dev/stdout" -cq! ; }
That will create headless vim to execute a command.
Now you can do for example:
echo $PATH | vimdo "%s_\c:[a-zA-Z0-9\\/]\{-}python[a-zA-Z0-9\\/]\{-}:__g" -
to filter out python in $PATH.
Use - to have input from pipe in vimdo.
While most of the syntax is the same. Vim features more advanced features, and using \{-} is standard for non-greedy match. see help regexp.

Do not print unmatched text with sed

I want to print only matched lines and strip unmatched ones, but with following:
$ echo test12 test | sed -n 's/^.*12/**/p'
I always get:
** test
instead of:
**
What am I doing wrong?
[edit1]
I provide more information of what I need - and actually I should start with it. So, I have a command which produced lots of lines of output, I want to grab only parts of the lines - the ones that matches, and strip the result. So in the above example 12 was meant to find end of matched part of the line, and instead of ** I should have put & which represents matched string. So the full example is:
echo test12 test | sed -n 's/^.*12/&/p'
which produces exactly the same output as input:
test12 test
the expected output is:
test12
As suggested I started to find a grep alternative and the following looks promising:
$ echo test12 test | grep -Eo "^.*12"
but I dont see how to format the matched part, this only strips unmatched text.
EDIT: In some cases, the -E flag might be needed for sed. But then the brackets don't need to be escaped anymore. check your sed's man page.
I think what you are looking for is this:
echo test12 test | sed -n 's/^\(.*12\).*$/\1/p'
if you want to discard the rest of the line, you have to match it as well, but not include it in the output. the \( and \) denote a group that is then referenced by the \1.
Good luck :)
Additional information on sed:
sed works on lines, and the ampersand characters represents the entire line that was matched by the given regular expression. if a regex is "open" at the end (i.e. doesn't end with the endline character ($), it acts as if .*$ is appended to the match string. (not sure if that is how it is implemented, but could very well be.)
Try:
echo test12 test | sed -n 's/^.*/**/p'
You don't need to match the number 12, since that is already being done in your regex.
Your regular expression is matching anything from the beginning of the line until the expression '12'. All the matched expression is replaced with '**', that is why you get '** test'. If you want only match I recommend you using grep.

Remove text between one string and 1st occurrence of another string

I have found several solutions to remove text between two strings but I guess my case is a little different.
I am trying to convert this:
/nz/kit.7.2.0.7/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume
To this:
/nz/kit/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume
Basically remove the version specific information from the filename.
The solutions I have found remove everything from the word kit to the last occurrence of /. I need something to remove from kit to the first occurrence.
The most common solution I have seen is:
sed -e 's/\(kit\).*\(\/\)/\1\2/'
Which produces:
/nz/kit/hostaekresume
How can I only remove up to the first /? I assume this can done with sed or awk, but open to suggestions.
$ sed 's|\(kit\)[^/]*|\1|' <<< '/nz/kit.7.2.0.7/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume'
/nz/kit/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume
This uses a different delimiter (| instead of /) so we don't have to escape the /. Then, for non-greedy matching, it uses [^/]*: any number of characters other than /, which matches everything between kit and the next /.
Alternatively, if you know that what you want to remove consists of dots and digits, and nothing else in the string contains them, you can use parameter expansion:
$ var='/nz/kit.7.2.0.7/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume'
$ echo "${var//[[:digit:].]}"
/nz/kit/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume
The syntax is ${parameter/pattern/string}, where pattern in the expanded parameter is replaced by string. If we use // instead of /, all occurrences instead of just the first are replaced.
In our case, parameter is var, the pattern is [[:digit:].] (digits or a dot – this is a glob pattern, not a regular expression, by the way), and we've skipped the /string part, which just removes the pattern (replaces it with nothing).
You need perl for non-greedy regex. sed doesn't do that yet.
Also, use | as a delimiter since / can cause confusion when you have it in your regex.
perl -pe 's|(kit).*?(/.*)|\1\2|'
The ? after the .* makes the pattern non-greedy and will match the first instance of /.
echo "/nz/kit.7.2.0.7/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume" | perl -pe 's|(kit).*?(/.*)|\1\2|'
returns
/nz/kit/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume
echo "/nz/kit.7.2.0.7/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume" | awk '{sub(/.7.2.0.7/,"")}1'
/nz/kit/bin/adm/tools/hostaekresume

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