24

I have a huge csv file (on order of terabytes).

Now, I want to insert one row which is a header to the the top.

For example if input.csv looks like this:

 1,2,3,4
 22,3,23,1

I want it to look like

id1,id2,id3,id4
 1,2,3,4
 and so on

How do i do this from shell, terminal, awk, bash?/

5 Answers 5

39

In place, using sed:

sed -i 1i"id1,id2,id3,id4" file.csv

edit:

As @Ed Morton points out, using sed with the -i switch sed edits the file in place, and can therefore be dangerous when editing large files. If you supply a prefix after the -i option then sed creates a backup. So something like this would be safer:

sed -i.bak 1i"id1,id2,id3,id4" file.csv

The original file will then be located in file.csv.bak

2
  • 2
    I would definitely not do that with such a large file. sed is creating a tmp file on the fly - if it fails to find the space for it I would not be surprised if you lost the contents of your original file. Just use cmd file > tmp && mv tmp file and you know you're safe.
    – Ed Morton
    Nov 15, 2012 at 17:53
  • @Ed: you're right, this is not particularly safe for very large files like the one in question. I have edited my answer to provide a safer alternative, still using sed. Nov 15, 2012 at 18:05
19

This is that simple as :

{ echo "id1,id2,id3,id4"; cat file.csv; } > newfile.csv

using simple shell concatenation.

EDIT

after discussion thread below, I propose this :

  • create a file with your header, said head.txt

Then :

cat head.txt file.csv > newfile.csv
4
  • Is there a way not to "echo" the whole contents of the file.. for some reason it is pritining all the contents of the file.. and its really huge file?
    – frazman
    Nov 15, 2012 at 17:40
  • @Fraz: there is no easy way to do this, even when doing it without a temporary file (like in my answer). The problem is that you are physically having to shift all of the data in your file down by 16 bytes. Nov 15, 2012 at 17:45
  • oh.. ok.. i am getting an error that command not found.. its a long query.. so here it is { echo "mkey1,merchant_id,flag, default,E1,E2,E3,E4,E5,E7,E8,E9,E10,E11,E12,E13,E14,E15,E16,E17,E18,E19,E20,E21,E22,E23,E24,E25,E26,E27,E28,E29,E30,E31,E32,E33,E34,E35,E36,E37,E38,E39,E40,E41,E42,I1,I2,I4,I5,I6,I7,I8,I9,I10,I11,I12,I13,I14,I15,I16,I17,I18,I19,I20,I21,I22,I23,I24,I25,I26,I27,I28,I29,I30,I31,I32,I33,I34,I35,I36,I37,I38,I39,I40,I41,I42,I43,I44,I46,I47,I48,I50,I51,I52,I53,I54,I55,I56,O1,O2,O3,O4,O5,O6,O7,O8,O9,benchmark_score,julian,weight " ; cat prepared_input.csv ; } > mahout_input.csv
    – frazman
    Nov 15, 2012 at 17:45
  • @LeeNetherton : sed -i is definitely creating a temporary file. Goo luck to all.
    – shellter
    Nov 15, 2012 at 17:49
3

Edit. When I wrote this answer, I overlooked the "terabyte" part of the question. Hence, do not use the method presented here. I still leave this post, as it advertises the use of this wonderful tool, ed, the standard text editor.

As usual, ed is the standard text editor. The solution using sed -i doesn't, as it mentions, "edit the file in place". Instead, it outputs its content to a temporary file, and then renames this file to the original one. That's really not good for large files!

Using ed instead really edits the file. Something along the following lines:

#!/bin/bash

file="input.csv"

{
ed -s "$file" <<EOF
1
i
id1,id2,id3,id4
.
wq
EOF
} > /dev/null

Explanation: 1 goes to the first line, i goes into insert mode, then we insert id1,id2,id3,id4 then . to go back to normal mode, and wq to write and quit.

With this method, you're really editing the file and it's twice faster than the sed method. Also, ed is known to be "large file safe"!

Done.

2
  • It's not true that no buffer is created. ed will read the whole file into a buffer and zap the original file before writing it's buffer to that file. It will be very slow and is not safe.
    – Ed Morton
    Nov 15, 2012 at 21:06
  • If you know that then you shouldn't mislead the OP by saying "No temporary file created, no buffers, no nothing!".
    – Ed Morton
    Nov 15, 2012 at 21:45
1

There's no easy way, you're going to have to rewrite the file. Probably the safest way is to

 ( echo "id1,id2,id3,id4" ; cat file ) > newFile && rm file

IHTH

6
  • my experience is that { .... } is effectively a subshell. So it's 1/2 of 1, .5 of another. Good luck.
    – shellter
    Nov 15, 2012 at 17:22
  • 3
    No, ( ) is a subshell while { } is a regroupment. Nov 15, 2012 at 17:26
  • @shellter: Is there a way not to "echo" the whole contents of the file.. for some reason it is pritining all the contents of the file.. and its really huge file?
    – frazman
    Nov 15, 2012 at 17:44
  • sorry, I'm aware of the difference between the two, my personal code uses { .. } whenenver it can, but in the case of a multi-terabyte file, I don't see that there would a a meaningful performance difference. My experince, when using ptree on { ... } groupings showed that a new process was created to manage the output. I don't have the time now to create a test case to revisit this. Good luck to all.
    – shellter
    Nov 15, 2012 at 17:48
  • @Fraz: No way. that's why I wrote "no easy way, you're going to have to rewrite the file". A known limitation (feature) to the Unix filesystem model ;-) .Sorry. Good luck to all.
    – shellter
    Nov 15, 2012 at 17:51
-2

echo "id1,id2,id3,id4" >> data.csv

1
  • Hey, welcome to StackOverflow! :) This is also a cool shortcut, but inserts the provided line at the end of the file.
    – blinry
    Mar 3, 2021 at 16:53

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