812

What's the simplest way to do a find and replace for a given input string, say abc, and replace with another string, say XYZ in file /tmp/file.txt?

I am writing an app and using IronPython to execute commands through SSH — but I don't know Unix that well and don't know what to look for.

I have heard that Bash, apart from being a command line interface, can be a very powerful scripting language. If this is true, I assume you can perform actions like these.

Can I do it with Bash, and what's the simplest (one line) script to achieve my goal?

18 Answers 18

1314

The easiest way is to use sed (or Perl):

sed -i -e 's/abc/XYZ/g' /tmp/file.txt

which will invoke sed to do an in-place edit due to the -i option. The /g flag for sed's s command says to replace globally, i.e. do not substitute only the first occurrence on each input line. This can be called from Bash.

(The -i option is not standard. On BSD-based platforms, including MacOS, you need an explicit option argument -i ''.)

If you really really want to use just Bash, then the following can work:

while IFS='' read -r a; do
    echo "${a//abc/XYZ}"
done < /tmp/file.txt > /tmp/file.txt.t
mv /tmp/file.txt{.t,}

This loops over each line, doing a substitution, and writing to a temporary file (don't want to clobber the input). The mv at the end just moves the temporary file to the original name. (For robustness and security, the temporary file name should not be static or predictable, but let's not go there.)

This uses a Bash-only parameter expansion to perform a replacement on the variable's value.

10
  • 4
    Except that invoking mv is pretty much as 'non Bash' as using sed. I nearly said the same of echo, but it's a shell builtin.
    – slim
    Feb 8, 2009 at 12:39
  • 5
    The -i argument for sed doesn't exist for Solaris (and I would think some other implementations) however, so keep that in mind. Just spent several minutes figuring that out...
    – Panky
    Nov 15, 2011 at 23:45
  • 5
    Note to self: about regular expression of sed: s/..../..../ - Substitute and /g - Global
    – checksum
    Feb 20, 2013 at 14:55
  • 134
    Note for Mac users who get an invalid command code C error... For in-place replacements, BSD sed requires a file extension after the -i flag because it saves a backup file with the given extension. For example: sed -i '.bak' 's/find/replace/' /file.txt You can skip the backup by using an empty string like so: sed -i '' 's/find/replace/' /file.txt
    – Austin
    Feb 21, 2013 at 21:36
  • 11
    Tip: If you want case insensitive repalce use s/abc/XYZ/gi Aug 6, 2014 at 0:03
182

File manipulation isn't normally done by Bash, but by programs invoked by Bash, e.g.:

perl -pi -e 's/abc/XYZ/g' /tmp/file.txt

The -i flag tells it to do an in-place replacement.

See man perlrun for more details, including how to take a backup of the original file.

6
  • 44
    The purist in me says you can't be sure Perl will be available on the system. But that's very seldom the case nowadays. Perhaps I'm showing my age.
    – slim
    Feb 8, 2009 at 12:44
  • 4
    Can you show a more complex example. Something like replacing "chdir /blah" with "chdir /blah2". I tried perl -pi -e 's/chdir (?:\\/[\\w\\.\\-]+)+/chdir blah/g' text, but I keep getting an error with Having no space between pattern and following word is deprecated at -e line 1. Unmatched ( in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/(chdir)( )( <-- HERE ?:\\/ at -e line 1. Nov 5, 2013 at 18:31
  • 1
    @CMCDragonkai Check this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/12061491/2730528 Dec 4, 2019 at 13:12
  • 2
    Why use Perl in this case when it's only function is to wrap a language around sed?
    – Edwin Buck
    May 24, 2023 at 19:54
  • 1
    @EdwinBuck some sed implementations don't support in-place editing.
    – Alnitak
    May 26, 2023 at 12:12
85

This is an old post but for anyone wanting to use variables as @centurian said the single quotes mean nothing will be expanded.

A simple way to get variables in is to do string concatenation since this is done by juxtaposition in bash the following should work:

sed -i -e "s/$var1/$var2/g" /tmp/file.txt
2
  • 1
    I use this in a file:sed "s/\"$li\"/- [x]\"\${li:5}\"/" $dat ang get sed unterminated `s' command
    – Timo
    Nov 18, 2020 at 17:58
  • Problem solved, well, ... $li comes from a file line, so there is e.g. \n and the error is there. So either awk or another language like python comes.
    – Timo
    Nov 18, 2020 at 18:38
77

I was surprised when I stumbled over this...

There is a replace command which ships with the "mysql-server" package, so if you have installed it try it out:

# replace string abc to XYZ in files
replace "abc" "XYZ" -- file.txt file2.txt file3.txt

# or pipe an echo to replace
echo "abcdef" |replace "abc" "XYZ"

See man replace for more on this.

7
  • 22
    Two things are possible here: a) replace is a useful independent tool and the MySQL folks should release it separately and depend on it b) replace requires some bit of MySQL o_O Either way, installing mysql-server to get replace would be the wrong thing to do :) Aug 28, 2014 at 15:31
  • only works for mac? in my ubuntu I centos that command does not exist
    – paul
    Aug 18, 2016 at 10:26
  • 1
    That's because you don't have mysql-server package installed. As pointed by @rayro, replace is part of it.
    – Phius
    Jan 11, 2017 at 15:53
  • 3
    "Warning: replace is deprecated and will be removed in a future version." Jan 4, 2018 at 16:52
  • 2
    Be careful not to run the REPLACE command on Windows! On Windows the REPLACE command is for a fast replication of files. Not relevant to this discussion.
    – Maor
    Jun 3, 2018 at 10:00
47

Bash, like other shells, is just a tool for coordinating other commands. Typically you would try to use standard UNIX commands, but you can of course use Bash to invoke anything, including your own compiled programs, other shell scripts, Python and Perl scripts etc.

In this case, there are a couple of ways to do it.

If you want to read a file, and write it to another file, doing search/replace as you go, use sed:

    sed 's/abc/XYZ/g' <infile >outfile

If you want to edit the file in place (as if opening the file in an editor, editing it, then saving it) supply instructions to the line editor 'ex'

    echo "%s/abc/XYZ/g
    w
    q
    " | ex file

Example is like vi without the fullscreen mode. You can give it the same commands you would at vi's : prompt.

4
  • @awattar Just do them one at a time in a for loop.
    – slim
    Jul 30, 2020 at 9:05
  • Is there an option to use it together with globbing as a one liner?
    – awattar
    Jul 30, 2020 at 9:07
  • Not as far as I know. for f in report*.txt; do echo "%s/abc/XYZ/g \n w \n q \n" | ex file; done is clean and simple. Why put functionality into ex that the shell already has?
    – slim
    Jul 30, 2020 at 9:15
  • (Or, if your problem outgrows the shell, use Python/Perl/whatever)
    – slim
    Jul 30, 2020 at 9:16
37

I found this thread among others and I agree it contains the most complete answers so I'm adding mine too:

  1. sed and ed are so useful...by hand. Look at this code from @Johnny:

    sed -i -e 's/abc/XYZ/g' /tmp/file.txt
    
  2. When my restriction is to use it in a shell script, no variable can be used inside in place of "abc" or "XYZ". The BashFAQ seems to agree with what I understand at least. So, I can't use:

    x='abc'
    y='XYZ'
    sed -i -e 's/$x/$y/g' /tmp/file.txt
    #or,
    sed -i -e "s/$x/$y/g" /tmp/file.txt
    

    but, what can we do? As, @Johnny said use a while read... but, unfortunately that's not the end of the story. The following worked well with me:

    #edit user's virtual domain
    result=
    #if nullglob is set then, unset it temporarily
    is_nullglob=$( shopt -s | egrep -i '*nullglob' )
    if [[ is_nullglob ]]; then
       shopt -u nullglob
    fi
    while IFS= read -r line; do
       line="${line//'<servername>'/$server}"
       line="${line//'<serveralias>'/$alias}"
       line="${line//'<user>'/$user}"
       line="${line//'<group>'/$group}"
       result="$result""$line"'\n'
    done < $tmp
    echo -e $result > $tmp
    #if nullglob was set then, re-enable it
    if [[ is_nullglob ]]; then
       shopt -s nullglob
    fi
    #move user's virtual domain to Apache 2 domain directory
    ......
    
  3. As one can see if nullglob is set then, it behaves strangely when there is a string containing a * as in:

    <VirtualHost *:80>
     ServerName www.example.com
    

    which becomes

    <VirtualHost ServerName www.example.com
    

    there is no ending angle bracket and Apache2 can't even load.

  4. This kind of parsing should be slower than one-hit search and replace but, as you already saw, there are four variables for four different search patterns working out of one parse cycle.

The most suitable solution I can think of with the given assumptions of the problem.

1
  • 15
    In your (2) -- you can do sed -e "s/$x/$y/", and it will work. Not the double quotes. It can get seriously confusing if the strings in the variables themselves contain characters with special meaning. For example if x="/" or x="\". When you hit these issues, it probably means you should stop trying to use the shell for this job.
    – slim
    Mar 6, 2013 at 10:51
34

You can use sed:

sed -i 's/abc/XYZ/gi' /tmp/file.txt

You can use find and sed if you don't know your filename:

find ./ -type f -exec sed -i 's/abc/XYZ/gi' {} \;

Find and replace in all Python files:

find ./ -iname "*.py" -type f -exec sed -i 's/abc/XYZ/gi' {} \;
1
  • 3
    -i isn't "ignore case", it's -i[SUFFIX], --in-place[=SUFFIX] (edit files in place (makes backup if SUFFIX supplied))
    – gvee
    Jul 8, 2020 at 11:00
17

Be careful if you replace URLs with "/" character.

An example of how to do it:

sed -i "s%http://domain.com%http://www.domain.com/folder/%g" "test.txt"

Extracted from: http://www.sysadmit.com/2015/07/linux-reemplazar-texto-en-archivos-con-sed.html

14

If the file you are working on is not so big, and temporarily storing it in a variable is no problem, then you can use Bash string substitution on the whole file at once - there's no need to go over it line by line:

file_contents=$(</tmp/file.txt)
echo "${file_contents//abc/XYZ}" > /tmp/file.txt

The whole file contents will be treated as one long string, including linebreaks.

XYZ can be a variable eg $replacement, and one advantage of not using sed here is that you need not be concerned that the search or replace string might contain the sed pattern delimiter character (usually, but not necessarily, /). A disadvantage is not being able to use regular expressions or any of sed's more sophisticated operations.

2
  • Any tips for using this with tab characters? For some reason my script doesn't find anything with tabs after changing from sed with lots of escaping to this method. Sep 25, 2017 at 17:37
  • 2
    If you want to put a tab in the string you're replacing, you can do so with Bash's "dollared single quotes" syntax, so a tab is represented by $'\t', and you can do $ echo 'tab'$'\t''separated' > testfile; $ file_contents=$(<testfile); $ echo "${file_contents//$'\t'/TAB}"; tabTABseparated `
    – johnraff
    Oct 27, 2017 at 7:07
13

You may also use the ed command to do in-file search and replace:

# delete all lines matching foobar 
ed -s test.txt <<< $'g/foobar/d\nw' 

See more in "Editing files via scripts with ed".

1
  • 3
    This solution is independent from GNU/FreeBSD (Mac OSX) incompatibilities (unlike sed -i <pattern> <filename>). Very nice!
    – Peterino
    Sep 12, 2014 at 9:59
6

To edit text in the file non-interactively, you need in-place text editor such as vim.

Here is simple example how to use it from the command line:

vim -esnc '%s/foo/bar/g|:wq' file.txt

This is equivalent to @slim answer of ex editor which is basically the same thing.

Here are few ex practical examples.

Replacing text foo with bar in the file:

ex -s +%s/foo/bar/ge -cwq file.txt

Removing trailing whitespaces for multiple files:

ex +'bufdo!%s/\s\+$//e' -cxa *.txt

Troubleshooting (when terminal is stuck):

  • Add -V1 param to show verbose messages.
  • Force quit by: -cwq!.

See also:

2
  • Wanted to do the replacements interactively. Hence tried "vim -esnc '%s/foo/bar/gc|:wq' file.txt". But the terminal is stuck now. How shall we make the replacements interactively without the bash shell behaving weirdly.
    – vineeshvs
    Apr 20, 2019 at 13:46
  • To debug, add -V1, to force quit, use wq!.
    – kenorb
    Apr 26, 2019 at 22:39
5

Try the following shell command:

find ./  -type f -name "file*.txt" | xargs sed -i -e 's/abc/xyz/g'
2
  • 5
    This is an excellent answer to "how do I accidentally all the files in all subdirectories, too" but that does not seem to be what is asked here.
    – tripleee
    Oct 11, 2016 at 14:08
  • This syntax won't work for BSD version of sed, use sed -i'' instead.
    – kenorb
    Sep 26, 2019 at 15:20
4

You can use python within the bash script too. I didn't have much success with some of the top answers here, and found this to work without the need for loops:

#!/bin/bash
python
filetosearch = '/home/ubuntu/ip_table.txt'
texttoreplace = 'tcp443'
texttoinsert = 'udp1194'

s = open(filetosearch).read()
s = s.replace(texttoreplace, texttoinsert)
f = open(filetosearch, 'w')
f.write(s)
f.close()
quit()
2

Simplest way to replace multiple text in a file using the sed command

sed -i 's#a/b/c#D/E#g;s#/x/y/z#D:/X#g;' filename

In the above command s#a/b/c#D/E#g I am replacing a/b/c with D/E and then after the ; we are again doing the same thing with x/y/z and D:/X

2

You can use the rpl command; this is an optional third-party tool (source at https://github.com/rrthomas/rpl/). For example, if you want to change a domain name in a whole PHP project:

rpl -ivRpd -x'.php' 'old.domain.name' 'new.domain.name' ./path_to_your_project_folder/  

This is not pure Bash of cause, but it's a very quick and useful.

1
  • This is easily done with standard tools as well. The sed solutions on this page show how to do it in one directory (though you need sed -i which is also nonstandard for most of them); just plug in into find . -type f -name '*.php' -exec ... \; to replace recursively in all *.php files in a directory tree.
    – tripleee
    Jan 3 at 5:20
1

For MAC users in case you don't read the comments :)

As mentioned by @Austin, if you get the Invalid command code error

For the in-place replacements BSD sed requires a file extension after the -i flag to save to a backup file with given extension.

sed -i '.bak' 's/find/replace' /file.txt

You can use '' empty string if you want to skip backup.

sed -i '' 's/find/replace' /file.txt

All merit to @Austin

1

Open file using vim editor. In command mode

:%s/abc/xyz/g 

This is the simplest

1
  • 2
    Dubious. The user then separately has to learn how to quit Vim.
    – tripleee
    Jan 2 at 17:25
-1

In case of doing changes in multiple files together we can do in a single line as:-

user_name='whoami'
for file in file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt; do sed -i -e 's/default_user/${user_name}/g' $file; done

Added if in case could be useful.

1

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