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.