Linux Split Command Examples

byHIMANSHU ARORAonOCTOBER 16, 2012http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2012/10/15-linux-split-and-join-command-examples-to-manage-large-files/Linux split and join commands are very helpful when you are manipulating large files. This article explains

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15 Linux Split and Join Command Examples to Manage Large Files

Linux split and join commands are very helpful when you are manipulating large files. This article explains how to use Linux split and join command with descriptive examples.

Join and split command syntax:

join [OPTION]… FILE1 FILE2split [OPTION]… [INPUT [PREFIX]]

Linux Split Command Examples

1. Basic Split Example

Here is a basic example of split command.

$ split split.zip 

$ ls
split.zip xab xad xaf xah xaj xal xan xap xar xat xav xax xaz xbb xbd xbf xbh xbj xbl xbn
xaa xac xae xag xai xak xam xao xaq xas xau xaw xay xba xbc xbe xbg xbi xbk xbm xbo

So we see that the file split.zip was split into smaller files with x** as file names. Where ** is the two character suffix that is added by default. Also,by default each x** file would contain 1000 lines.

$ wc -l *
   40947 split.zip
    1000 xaa
    1000 xab
    1000 xac
    1000 xad
    1000 xae
    1000 xaf
    1000 xag
    1000 xah
    1000 xai
...
...
...

So the output above confirms that by default each x** file contains 1000 lines.

2.Change the Suffix Length using -a option

As discussed in example 1 above,the default suffix length is 2. But this can be changed by using -a option.

As you see in the following example,it is using suffix of length 5 on the split files.

$ split -a5 split.zip
$ ls
split.zip  xaaaac  xaaaaf  xaaaai  xaaaal  xaaaao  xaaaar  xaaaau  xaaaax  xaaaba  xaaabd  xaaabg  xaaabj  xaaabm
xaaaaa     xaaaad  xaaaag  xaaaaj  xaaaam  xaaaap  xaaaas  xaaaav  xaaaay  xaaabb  xaaabe  xaaabh  xaaabk  xaaabn
xaaaab     xaaaae  xaaaah  xaaaak  xaaaan  xaaaaq  xaaaat  xaaaaw  xaaaaz  xaaabc  xaaabf  xaaabi  xaaabl  xaaabo

Note: Earlier we also discussed about other file manipulation utilities –.

3.Customize Split File Size using -b option

Size of each output split file can be controlled using -b option.

In this example,the split files were created with a size of 200000 bytes.

$ split -b200000 split.zip 

$ ls -lart
total 21084
drwxrwxr-x 3 himanshu himanshu 4096 Sep 26 21:20 ..
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 10767315 Sep 26 21:21 split.zip
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xad
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xac
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xab
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xaa
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xah
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xag
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xaf
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xae
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 200000 Sep 26 21:35 xar
...
...
...

4. Create Split Files with Numeric Suffix using -d option

As seen in examples above,the output has the format of x** where ** are alphabets. You can change this to number using -d option.

Here is an example. This has numeric suffix on the split files.

$ split -d split.zip
$ ls
split.zip  x01  x03  x05  x07  x09  x11  x13  x15  x17  x19  x21  x23  x25  x27  x29  x31  x33  x35  x37  x39
x00        x02  x04  x06  x08  x10  x12  x14  x16  x18  x20  x22  x24  x26  x28  x30  x32  x34  x36  x38  x40

5. Customize the Number of Split Chunks using -C option

To get control over the number of chunks,use the -C option.

This example will create 50 chunks of split files.

$ split -n50 split.zip
$ ls
split.zip  xac  xaf  xai  xal  xao  xar  xau  xax  xba  xbd  xbg  xbj  xbm  xbp  xbs  xbv
xaa        xad  xag  xaj  xam  xap  xas  xav  xay  xbb  xbe  xbh  xbk  xbn  xbq  xbt  xbw
xab        xae  xah  xak  xan  xaq  xat  xaw  xaz  xbc  xbf  xbi  xbl  xbo  xbr  xbu  xbx

6. Avoid Zero Sized Chunks using -e option

While splitting a relatively small file in large number of chunks,its good to avoid zero sized chunks as they do not add any value. This can be done using -e option.

Here is an example:

$ split -n50 testfile

$ ls -lart x*
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 0 Sep 26 21:55 xag
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:55 xaf
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:55 xae
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:55 xad
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:55 xac
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:55 xab
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:55 xaa
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 0 Sep 26 21:55 xbx
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 0 Sep 26 21:55 xbw
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 0 Sep 26 21:55 xbv
...
...
...

So we see that lots of zero size chunks were produced in the above output. Now,lets use -e option and see the results:

$ split -n50 -e testfile
$ ls
split.zip  testfile  xaa  xab  xac  xad  xae  xaf

$ ls -lart x*
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:57 xaf
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:57 xae
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:57 xad
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:57 xac
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:57 xab
-rw-rw-r-- 1 himanshu himanshu 1 Sep 26 21:57 xaa

So we see that no zero sized chunk was produced in the above output.

7. Customize Number of Lines using -l option

Number of lines per output split file can be customized using the -l option.

As seen in the example below,split files are created with 20000 lines.

$ split -l20000 split.zip

$ ls
split.zip testfile xaa xab xac

$ wc -l x*
20000 xaa
20000 xab
947 xac
40947 total

Get Detailed Information using –verbose option

To get a diagnostic message each time a new split file is opened,use –verbose option as shown below.

$ split -l20000 --verbose split.zip
creating file `xaa'
creating file `xab'
creating file `xac'

Linux Join Command Examples

8. Basic Join Example

Join command works on first field of the two files (supplied as input) by matching the first fields.

Here is an example :

$ cat testfile1
1 India
2 US
3 Ireland
4 UK
5 Canada

$ cat testfile2
1 NewDelhi
2 Washington
3 Dublin
4 London
5 Toronto

$ join testfile1 testfile2
1 India NewDelhi
2 US Washington
3 Ireland Dublin
4 UK London
5 Canada Toronto

So we see that a file containing countries was joined with another file containing capitals on the basis of first field.

9. Join works on Sorted List

If any of the two files supplied to join command is not sorted then it shows up a warning in output and that particular entry is not joined.

In this example,since the input file is not sorted,it will display a warning/error message.

$ cat testfile1
1 India
2 US
3 Ireland
5 Canada
4 UK

$ cat testfile2
1 NewDelhi
2 Washington
3 Dublin
4 London
5 Toronto

$ join testfile1 testfile2
1 India NewDelhi
2 US Washington
3 Ireland Dublin
join: testfile1:5: is not sorted: 4 UK
5 Canada Toronto

10. Ignore Case using -i option

When comparing fields,the difference in case can be ignored using -i option as shown below.

$ cat testfile1
a India
b US
c Ireland
d UK
e Canada

$ cat testfile2
a NewDelhi
B Washington
c Dublin
d London
e Toronto

$ join testfile1 testfile2
a India NewDelhi
c Ireland Dublin
d UK London
e Canada Toronto

$ join -i testfile1 testfile2
a India NewDelhi
b US Washington
c Ireland Dublin
d UK London
e Canada Toronto

11. Verify that Input is Sorted using –check-order option

Here is an example. Since testfile1 was unsorted towards the end so an error was produced in the output.

$ cat testfile1
a India
b US
c Ireland
d UK
f Australia
e Canada

$ cat testfile2
a NewDelhi
b Washington
c Dublin
d London
e Toronto

作者: dawei

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