Take substring and remove period in bash - bash

I have a string for example : 192.168.22.13
I want to take a substring and remove the periods such that I get 2213 only from this string which i can use as a custom port number.
Is there anyway I can do this in a single bash command instead of doing:
e1=${1//.}
e1Port=${e1:6}

bash string directives don't allow nested expressions.
You may use awk for a single command:
s='192.168.22.13'
port=$(awk -F '.' '{print $3 $4}' <<< "$s")
echo "$port"
2213

Related

Double quotes containing variable not working in sed [duplicate]

In my bash script I have an external (received from user) string, which I should use in sed pattern.
REPLACE="<funny characters here>"
sed "s/KEYWORD/$REPLACE/g"
How can I escape the $REPLACE string so it would be safely accepted by sed as a literal replacement?
NOTE: The KEYWORD is a dumb substring with no matches etc. It is not supplied by user.
Warning: This does not consider newlines. For a more in-depth answer, see this SO-question instead. (Thanks, Ed Morton & Niklas Peter)
Note that escaping everything is a bad idea. Sed needs many characters to be escaped to get their special meaning. For example, if you escape a digit in the replacement string, it will turn in to a backreference.
As Ben Blank said, there are only three characters that need to be escaped in the replacement string (escapes themselves, forward slash for end of statement and & for replace all):
ESCAPED_REPLACE=$(printf '%s\n' "$REPLACE" | sed -e 's/[\/&]/\\&/g')
# Now you can use ESCAPED_REPLACE in the original sed statement
sed "s/KEYWORD/$ESCAPED_REPLACE/g"
If you ever need to escape the KEYWORD string, the following is the one you need:
sed -e 's/[]\/$*.^[]/\\&/g'
And can be used by:
KEYWORD="The Keyword You Need";
ESCAPED_KEYWORD=$(printf '%s\n' "$KEYWORD" | sed -e 's/[]\/$*.^[]/\\&/g');
# Now you can use it inside the original sed statement to replace text
sed "s/$ESCAPED_KEYWORD/$ESCAPED_REPLACE/g"
Remember, if you use a character other than / as delimiter, you need replace the slash in the expressions above wih the character you are using. See PeterJCLaw's comment for explanation.
Edited: Due to some corner cases previously not accounted for, the commands above have changed several times. Check the edit history for details.
The sed command allows you to use other characters instead of / as separator:
sed 's#"http://www\.fubar\.com"#URL_FUBAR#g'
The double quotes are not a problem.
The only three literal characters which are treated specially in the replace clause are / (to close the clause), \ (to escape characters, backreference, &c.), and & (to include the match in the replacement). Therefore, all you need to do is escape those three characters:
sed "s/KEYWORD/$(echo $REPLACE | sed -e 's/\\/\\\\/g; s/\//\\\//g; s/&/\\\&/g')/g"
Example:
$ export REPLACE="'\"|\\/><&!"
$ echo fooKEYWORDbar | sed "s/KEYWORD/$(echo $REPLACE | sed -e 's/\\/\\\\/g; s/\//\\\//g; s/&/\\\&/g')/g"
foo'"|\/><&!bar
Based on Pianosaurus's regular expressions, I made a bash function that escapes both keyword and replacement.
function sedeasy {
sed -i "s/$(echo $1 | sed -e 's/\([[\/.*]\|\]\)/\\&/g')/$(echo $2 | sed -e 's/[\/&]/\\&/g')/g" $3
}
Here's how you use it:
sedeasy "include /etc/nginx/conf.d/*" "include /apps/*/conf/nginx.conf" /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
It's a bit late to respond... but there IS a much simpler way to do this. Just change the delimiter (i.e., the character that separates fields). So, instead of s/foo/bar/ you write s|bar|foo.
And, here's the easy way to do this:
sed 's|/\*!50017 DEFINER=`snafu`#`localhost`\*/||g'
The resulting output is devoid of that nasty DEFINER clause.
It turns out you're asking the wrong question. I also asked the wrong question. The reason it's wrong is the beginning of the first sentence: "In my bash script...".
I had the same question & made the same mistake. If you're using bash, you don't need to use sed to do string replacements (and it's much cleaner to use the replace feature built into bash).
Instead of something like, for example:
function escape-all-funny-characters() { UNKNOWN_CODE_THAT_ANSWERS_THE_QUESTION_YOU_ASKED; }
INPUT='some long string with KEYWORD that need replacing KEYWORD.'
A="$(escape-all-funny-characters 'KEYWORD')"
B="$(escape-all-funny-characters '<funny characters here>')"
OUTPUT="$(sed "s/$A/$B/g" <<<"$INPUT")"
you can use bash features exclusively:
INPUT='some long string with KEYWORD that need replacing KEYWORD.'
A='KEYWORD'
B='<funny characters here>'
OUTPUT="${INPUT//"$A"/"$B"}"
Use awk - it is cleaner:
$ awk -v R='//addr:\\file' '{ sub("THIS", R, $0); print $0 }' <<< "http://file:\_THIS_/path/to/a/file\\is\\\a\\ nightmare"
http://file:\_//addr:\file_/path/to/a/file\\is\\\a\\ nightmare
Here is an example of an AWK I used a while ago. It is an AWK that prints new AWKS. AWK and SED being similar it may be a good template.
ls | awk '{ print "awk " "'"'"'" " {print $1,$2,$3} " "'"'"'" " " $1 ".old_ext > " $1 ".new_ext" }' > for_the_birds
It looks excessive, but somehow that combination of quotes works to keep the ' printed as literals. Then if I remember correctly the vaiables are just surrounded with quotes like this: "$1". Try it, let me know how it works with SED.
These are the escape codes that I've found:
* = \x2a
( = \x28
) = \x29
" = \x22
/ = \x2f
\ = \x5c
' = \x27
? = \x3f
% = \x25
^ = \x5e
sed is typically a mess, especially the difference between gnu-sed and bsd-sed
might just be easier to place some sort of sentinel at the sed side, then a quick pipe over to awk, which is far more flexible in accepting any ERE regex, escaped hex, or escaped octals.
e.g. OFS in awk is the true replacement ::
date | sed -E 's/[0-9]+/\xC1\xC0/g' |
mawk NF=NF FS='\xC1\xC0' OFS='\360\237\244\241'
1 Tue Aug 🤡 🤡:🤡:🤡 EDT 🤡
(tested and confirmed working on both BSD-sed and GNU-sed - the emoji isn't a typo that's what those 4 bytes map to in UTF-8 )
There are dozens of answers out there... If you don't mind using a bash function schema, below is a good answer. The objective below was to allow using sed with practically any parameter as a KEYWORD (F_PS_TARGET) or as a REPLACE (F_PS_REPLACE). We tested it in many scenarios and it seems to be pretty safe. The implementation below supports tabs, line breaks and sigle quotes for both KEYWORD and replace REPLACE.
NOTES: The idea here is to use sed to escape entries for another sed command.
CODE
F_REVERSE_STRING_R=""
f_reverse_string() {
: 'Do a string reverse.
To undo just use a reversed string as STRING_INPUT.
Args:
STRING_INPUT (str): String input.
Returns:
F_REVERSE_STRING_R (str): The modified string.
'
local STRING_INPUT=$1
F_REVERSE_STRING_R=$(echo "x${STRING_INPUT}x" | tac | rev)
F_REVERSE_STRING_R=${F_REVERSE_STRING_R%?}
F_REVERSE_STRING_R=${F_REVERSE_STRING_R#?}
}
# [Ref(s).: https://stackoverflow.com/a/2705678/3223785 ]
F_POWER_SED_ECP_R=""
f_power_sed_ecp() {
: 'Escape strings for the "sed" command.
Escaped characters will be processed as is (e.g. /n, /t ...).
Args:
F_PSE_VAL_TO_ECP (str): Value to be escaped.
F_PSE_ECP_TYPE (int): 0 - For the TARGET value; 1 - For the REPLACE value.
Returns:
F_POWER_SED_ECP_R (str): Escaped value.
'
local F_PSE_VAL_TO_ECP=$1
local F_PSE_ECP_TYPE=$2
# NOTE: Operational characters of "sed" will be escaped, as well as single quotes.
# By Questor
if [ ${F_PSE_ECP_TYPE} -eq 0 ] ; then
# NOTE: For the TARGET value. By Questor
F_POWER_SED_ECP_R=$(echo "x${F_PSE_VAL_TO_ECP}x" | sed 's/[]\/$*.^[]/\\&/g' | sed "s/'/\\\x27/g" | sed ':a;N;$!ba;s/\n/\\n/g')
else
# NOTE: For the REPLACE value. By Questor
F_POWER_SED_ECP_R=$(echo "x${F_PSE_VAL_TO_ECP}x" | sed 's/[\/&]/\\&/g' | sed "s/'/\\\x27/g" | sed ':a;N;$!ba;s/\n/\\n/g')
fi
F_POWER_SED_ECP_R=${F_POWER_SED_ECP_R%?}
F_POWER_SED_ECP_R=${F_POWER_SED_ECP_R#?}
}
# [Ref(s).: https://stackoverflow.com/a/24134488/3223785 ,
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/21740695/3223785 ,
# https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/655558/61742 ,
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/11461628/3223785 ,
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/45151986/3223785 ,
# https://linuxaria.com/pills/tac-and-rev-to-see-files-in-reverse-order ,
# https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/631355/61742 ]
F_POWER_SED_R=""
f_power_sed() {
: 'Facilitate the use of the "sed" command. Replaces in files and strings.
Args:
F_PS_TARGET (str): Value to be replaced by the value of F_PS_REPLACE.
F_PS_REPLACE (str): Value that will replace F_PS_TARGET.
F_PS_FILE (Optional[str]): File in which the replacement will be made.
F_PS_SOURCE (Optional[str]): String to be manipulated in case "F_PS_FILE" was
not informed.
F_PS_NTH_OCCUR (Optional[int]): [1~n] - Replace the nth match; [n~-1] - Replace
the last nth match; 0 - Replace every match; Default 1.
Returns:
F_POWER_SED_R (str): Return the result if "F_PS_FILE" is not informed.
'
local F_PS_TARGET=$1
local F_PS_REPLACE=$2
local F_PS_FILE=$3
local F_PS_SOURCE=$4
local F_PS_NTH_OCCUR=$5
if [ -z "$F_PS_NTH_OCCUR" ] ; then
F_PS_NTH_OCCUR=1
fi
local F_PS_REVERSE_MODE=0
if [ ${F_PS_NTH_OCCUR} -lt -1 ] ; then
F_PS_REVERSE_MODE=1
f_reverse_string "$F_PS_TARGET"
F_PS_TARGET="$F_REVERSE_STRING_R"
f_reverse_string "$F_PS_REPLACE"
F_PS_REPLACE="$F_REVERSE_STRING_R"
f_reverse_string "$F_PS_SOURCE"
F_PS_SOURCE="$F_REVERSE_STRING_R"
F_PS_NTH_OCCUR=$((-F_PS_NTH_OCCUR))
fi
f_power_sed_ecp "$F_PS_TARGET" 0
F_PS_TARGET=$F_POWER_SED_ECP_R
f_power_sed_ecp "$F_PS_REPLACE" 1
F_PS_REPLACE=$F_POWER_SED_ECP_R
local F_PS_SED_RPL=""
if [ ${F_PS_NTH_OCCUR} -eq -1 ] ; then
# NOTE: We kept this option because it performs better when we only need to replace
# the last occurrence. By Questor
# [Ref(s).: https://linuxhint.com/use-sed-replace-last-occurrence/ ,
# https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/713866/61742 ]
F_PS_SED_RPL="'s/\(.*\)$F_PS_TARGET/\1$F_PS_REPLACE/'"
elif [ ${F_PS_NTH_OCCUR} -gt 0 ] ; then
# [Ref(s).: https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/587924/61742 ]
F_PS_SED_RPL="'s/$F_PS_TARGET/$F_PS_REPLACE/$F_PS_NTH_OCCUR'"
elif [ ${F_PS_NTH_OCCUR} -eq 0 ] ; then
F_PS_SED_RPL="'s/$F_PS_TARGET/$F_PS_REPLACE/g'"
fi
# NOTE: As the "sed" commands below always process literal values for the "F_PS_TARGET"
# so we use the "-z" flag in case it has multiple lines. By Quaestor
# [Ref(s).: https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/525524/61742 ]
if [ -z "$F_PS_FILE" ] ; then
F_POWER_SED_R=$(echo "x${F_PS_SOURCE}x" | eval "sed -z $F_PS_SED_RPL")
F_POWER_SED_R=${F_POWER_SED_R%?}
F_POWER_SED_R=${F_POWER_SED_R#?}
if [ ${F_PS_REVERSE_MODE} -eq 1 ] ; then
f_reverse_string "$F_POWER_SED_R"
F_POWER_SED_R="$F_REVERSE_STRING_R"
fi
else
if [ ${F_PS_REVERSE_MODE} -eq 0 ] ; then
eval "sed -i -z $F_PS_SED_RPL \"$F_PS_FILE\""
else
tac "$F_PS_FILE" | rev | eval "sed -z $F_PS_SED_RPL" | tac | rev > "$F_PS_FILE"
fi
fi
}
MODEL
f_power_sed "F_PS_TARGET" "F_PS_REPLACE" "" "F_PS_SOURCE"
echo "$F_POWER_SED_R"
EXAMPLE
f_power_sed "{ gsub(/,[ ]+|$/,\"\0\"); print }' ./ and eliminate" "[ ]+|$/,\"\0\"" "" "Great answer (+1). If you change your awk to awk '{ gsub(/,[ ]+|$/,\"\0\"); print }' ./ and eliminate that concatenation of the final \", \" then you don't have to go through the gymnastics on eliminating the final record. So: readarray -td '' a < <(awk '{ gsub(/,[ ]+/,\"\0\"); print; }' <<<\"$string\") on Bash that supports readarray. Note your method is Bash 4.4+ I think because of the -d in readar"
echo "$F_POWER_SED_R"
IF YOU JUST WANT TO ESCAPE THE PARAMETERS TO THE SED COMMAND
MODEL
# "TARGET" value.
f_power_sed_ecp "F_PSE_VAL_TO_ECP" 0
echo "$F_POWER_SED_ECP_R"
# "REPLACE" value.
f_power_sed_ecp "F_PSE_VAL_TO_ECP" 1
echo "$F_POWER_SED_ECP_R"
IMPORTANT: If the strings for KEYWORD and/or replace REPLACE contain tabs or line breaks you will need to use the "-z" flag in your "sed" command. More details here.
EXAMPLE
f_power_sed_ecp "{ gsub(/,[ ]+|$/,\"\0\"); print }' ./ and eliminate" 0
echo "$F_POWER_SED_ECP_R"
f_power_sed_ecp "[ ]+|$/,\"\0\"" 1
echo "$F_POWER_SED_ECP_R"
NOTE: The f_power_sed_ecp and f_power_sed functions above was made available completely free as part of this project ez_i - Create shell script installers easily!.
Standard recommendation here: use perl :)
echo KEYWORD > /tmp/test
REPLACE="<funny characters here>"
perl -pi.bck -e "s/KEYWORD/${REPLACE}/g" /tmp/test
cat /tmp/test
don't forget all the pleasure that occur with the shell limitation around " and '
so (in ksh)
Var=">New version of \"content' here <"
printf "%s" "${Var}" | sed "s/[&\/\\\\*\\"']/\\&/g' | read -r EscVar
echo "Here is your \"text\" to change" | sed "s/text/${EscVar}/g"
If the case happens to be that you are generating a random password to pass to sed replace pattern, then you choose to be careful about which set of characters in the random string. If you choose a password made by encoding a value as base64, then there is is only character that is both possible in base64 and is also a special character in sed replace pattern. That character is "/", and is easily removed from the password you are generating:
# password 32 characters log, minus any copies of the "/" character.
pass=`openssl rand -base64 32 | sed -e 's/\///g'`;
If you are just looking to replace Variable value in sed command then just remove
Example:
sed -i 's/dev-/dev-$ENV/g' test to sed -i s/dev-/dev-$ENV/g test
I have an improvement over the sedeasy function, which WILL break with special characters like tab.
function sedeasy_improved {
sed -i "s/$(
echo "$1" | sed -e 's/\([[\/.*]\|\]\)/\\&/g'
| sed -e 's:\t:\\t:g'
)/$(
echo "$2" | sed -e 's/[\/&]/\\&/g'
| sed -e 's:\t:\\t:g'
)/g" "$3"
}
So, whats different? $1 and $2 wrapped in quotes to avoid shell expansions and preserve tabs or double spaces.
Additional piping | sed -e 's:\t:\\t:g' (I like : as token) which transforms a tab in \t.
An easier way to do this is simply building the string before hand and using it as a parameter for sed
rpstring="s/KEYWORD/$REPLACE/g"
sed -i $rpstring test.txt

Is there a way to format the width of a substring within a string in a bash/sh script?

I have to format the width of a substring within a string using a bash script, but without using tokens or loops. A single character between two colons should be prepended by a 0 in order to match the standard width of 2 for each field.
For e.g
from:
6:0:36:35:30:30:72:6c:73:0:c:52:4c:30:31:30:31:30:30:30:31:36:39:0:1:3
to
06:00:36:35:30:30:72:6c:73:00:0c:52:4c:30:31:30:31:30:30:30:31:36:39:00:01:03
How can I do this?
sed -r 's/\<([0-9a-f])\>/0\1/g'
Search and replace with a regex. Use \< and \> to match word boundaries so [0-9a-f] only matches single digits.
$ sed -r 's/\<([0-9a-f])\>/0\1/g' <<< "6:0:36:35:30:30:72:6c:73:0:c:52:4c:30:31:30:31:30:30:30:31:36:39:0:1:3"
06:00:36:35:30:30:72:6c:73:00:0c:52:4c:30:31:30:31:30:30:30:31:36:39:00:01:03
awk -F: -v OFS=: '{for(i=1;i<=NF;i++) if(length($i)==1)gsub($i,"0&",$i)}1' file
Output:
06:00:36:35:30:30:72:6c:73:00:0c:52:4c:30:31:30:31:30:30:30:31:36:39:00:01:03
This will divide the whole line into fields separated by : , if the length of any of the field is == 1. then it will replace that field with 0field.
Bash solution:
IFS=:; for i in $string; do echo -n 0$i: | tail -c 3; done
With
str="06:00:36:35:30:30:72:6c:73:00:0c:52:4c:30:31:30:31:30:30:30:31:36:39:00:01:03"
you can add a '0' to all tokens and remove those that are unwanted:
sed -r 's/0([0-9a-f]{2})/\1/g' <<< "0${str//:/:0}"
That doesn't feel right, making errors and repairing them.
A better alternative is
echo $(IFS=:; printf "%2s:" ${str} | tr " " "0")

bash remove/change values from one field with a loop

I have a file where the 10th column in excel contains prices.
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"5000",19.50,justin,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"75,000",19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"100,000",19.50,selena,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"5500",19.50,gomez,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"50,000",19.50,gomez,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"350,000",19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"50000",19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
When it goes to csv the quotes and the comma's stay.
I need to pick out the column that is surrounded by quotes - I use grep -o
and then after clearing the commas, i get rid of the quotes.
I can't use quotes or comma to delimit in awk because the prices get broken up into different fields.
cat /tmp/wowmom | awk -F ',' '{print $10}'
"5000"
"75
"100
"5500"
"50
"350
"50000"
while read line
do
clean_price=$(grep -o '".*"' $line)
echo "$clean_price" | tr -d',' > cleanprice1
echo "cleanprice1" | tr -d'"' > clearnprice2
done </tmp/wowmom
I get errors though "No such file or directory" on the grep
grep:CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"5000",19.50,justin,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,:No such file or directory
grep:CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"75,000",19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,:No such file or directory
grep:CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"100,000",19.50,selena,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,:No such file or directory
grep:CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"50,000",19.50,gomez,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,:No such file or directory
grep:CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,"350,000",19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,:No such file or directory
I want to some way, Isolate the value within quotes with a grep -o and take out comma from the number , then use awk to take the quotes out of field 10.
I am doinng this manually right now It is a suprizingly long job - there are thousands of lines on this.
You an use FPAT with gnu-awk for this:
awk -v FPAT='"[^"]+",|[^,]*' '{gsub(/[",]+/, "", $10)} 1' OFS=, file
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,5000,19.50,justin,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,75000,19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,100000,19.50,selena,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,5500,19.50,gomez,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,50000,19.50,gomez,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,350000,19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,50000,19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
You are using the wrong tool here.
sed -r 's/^(([^,]+,){9})"([^,]+),?([^,]+)"/\1\3\4/' file.csv > newfile.csv
The regular expression captures the first nine fields into the first back reference (and also populates the second with the last of the nine fields), the number before the separator comma in the third, and the rest of the number in the fourth, then the substitution glues them back without the skipped elements.
If you have numbers with more than one thousands separator (i.e. above one million), you will need a slightly more complex script.
In terms of what's wrong with your original script, the second argument to grep is the name of the file to grep, not the string to grep. You can use a here string (in Bash) or pipe the string to grep, but again, this is not how you do it properly.
grep -o '"[^"]*"' <<<"$line"
or
printf '%s' "$line" | grep -o '"[^"]*"'
Notice also the quotes -- omitting quotes are a common newbie error; you can get away with it for a while, and then it bites you.
A pure Bash solution:
while IFS=\" read -r l n r; do
printf '%s\n' "$l${n//,/}$r"
done < input_file.txt
If you're looking for perl:
#!perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Text::CSV;
use autodie;
my $csv = Text::CSV->new({binary=>1, eol=>"\n"});
my $filename = shift #ARGV;
open my $fh, "<", $filename;
while (my $row = $csv->getline($fh)) {
$row->[9] =~ s/,//g;
$csv->print(*STDOUT, $row);
}
close $fh;
demo:
$ perl csv.pl file
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,5000,19.50,justin,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,75000,19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,100000,19.50,selena,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,5500,19.50,gomez,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,50000,19.50,gomez,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,350000,19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,
CASPER,N,CUSIP,0000000000,WOWMOM,USD,USD,US,B,50000,19.50,bieber,20160506,0,,N,E,,,,,,

Bash command to extract characters in a string

I want to write a small script to generate the location of a file in an NGINX cache directory.
The format of the path is:
/path/to/nginx/cache/d8/40/32/13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032
Note the last 6 characters: d8 40 32, are represented in the path.
As an input I give the md5 hash (13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032) and I want to generate the output: d8/40/32/13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032
I'm sure sed or awk will be handy, but I don't know yet how...
This awk can make it:
awk 'BEGIN{FS=""; OFS="/"}{print $(NF-5)$(NF-4), $(NF-3)$(NF-2), $(NF-1)$NF, $0}'
Explanation
BEGIN{FS=""; OFS="/"}. FS="" sets the input field separator to be "", so that every char will be a different field. OFS="/" sets the output field separator as /, for print matters.
print ... $(NF-1)$NF, $0 prints the penultimate field and the last one all together; then, the whole string. The comma is "filled" with the OFS, which is /.
Test
$ awk 'BEGIN{FS=""; OFS="/"}{print $(NF-5)$(NF-4), $(NF-3)$(NF-2), $(NF-1)$NF, $0}' <<< "13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032"
d8/40/32/13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032
Or with a file:
$ cat a
13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032
13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15f1f2f3
$ awk 'BEGIN{FS=""; OFS="/"}{print $(NF-5)$(NF-4), $(NF-3)$(NF-2), $(NF-1)$NF, $0}' a
d8/40/32/13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032
f1/f2/f3/13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15f1f2f3
With sed:
echo '13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032' | \
sed -n 's/\(.*\([0-9a-f]\{2\}\)\([0-9a-f]\{2\}\)\([0-9a-f]\{2\}\)\)$/\2\/\3\/\4\/\1/p;'
Having GNU sed you can even simplify the pattern using the -r option. Now you won't need to escape {} and () any more. Using ~ as the regex delimiter allows to use the path separator / without need to escape it:
sed -nr 's~(.*([0-9a-f]{2})([0-9a-f]{2})([0-9a-f]{2}))$~\2/\3/\4/\1~p;'
Output:
d8/40/32/13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032
Explained simple the pattern does the following: It matches:
(all (n-5 - n-4) (n-3 - n-2) (n-1 - n-0))
and replaces it by
/$1/$2/$3/$0
You can use a regular expression to separate each of the last 3 bytes from the rest of the hash.
hash=13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032
[[ $hash =~ (..)(..)(..)$ ]]
new_path="/path/to/nginx/cache/${BASH_REMATCH[1]}/${BASH_REMATCH[2]}/${BASH_REMATCH[3]}/$hash"
Base="/path/to/nginx/cache/"
echo '13febd65d65112badd0aa90a15d84032' | \
sed "s|\(.*\(..\)\(..\)\(..\)\)|${Base}\2/\3/\4/\1|"
# or
# sed sed 's|.*\(..\)\(..\)\(..\)$|${Base}\1/\2/\3/&|'
Assuming info is a correct MD5 (and only) string
First of all - thanks to all of the responders - this was extremely quick!
I also did my own scripting meantime, and came up with this solution:
Run this script with a parameter of the URL you're looking for (www.example.com/article/76232?q=hello for example)
#!/bin/bash
path=$1
md5=$(echo -n "$path" | md5sum | cut -f1 -d' ')
p3=$(echo "${md5:0-2:2}")
p2=$(echo "${md5:0-4:2}")
p1=$(echo "${md5:0-6:2}")
echo "/path/to/nginx/cache/$p1/$p2/$p3/$md5"
This assumes the NGINX cache has a key structure of 2:2:2.

Cut the first and the last part of a string in bash

I have a string having this formats:
aa_bb_cc_dd
aa_bb_cc_dd_ee_ff
I want to obtain:
bb_cc
bb_cc_dd_ee
I've tried 'cut', but I didn't manage to obtain what I wanted.
when using bash you can use built-ins for this task:
strip_headtail() {
local s=$1
## strip the head
s=${s#*_}
## strip the tail
s=${s%_*}
echo ${s}
}
strip_headtail aa_bb_cc_dd
strip_headtail aa_bb_cc_dd_ee_ff
you might want to check the bash-manual (man bash) for more information on this.
search for Remove matching prefix pattern resp. Remove matching suffix pattern.
With awk:
$ echo "aa_bb_cc_dd
aa_bb_cc_dd_ee_ff" | awk -F_ '{for(i=1;i<NF;i++) $i=$(i+1); NF=NF-2}1' OFS=_
bb_cc
bb_cc_dd_ee
Explanation
-F_ and OFS=_ set input and output field separator as _.
{for(i=1;i<NF;i++) $i=$(i+1); NF=NF-2} set each field as the next one, so the nth will be the (n+1)th. Then, decrease number of fields in 2.
With sed:
$ echo "aa_bb_cc_dd
aa_bb_cc_dd_ee_ff" | sed -e 's/^[^_]*_//' -e 's/_[^_]*$//'
bb_cc
bb_cc_dd_ee
Explanation
sed -e is used to do multiple commands.
's/^[^_]*_//' delete from the beginning up to first _.
's/_[^_]*$//' delete from last _ up to the end of line.

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