2327

How would I use sed to delete all lines in a text file that contain a specific string?

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21 Answers 21

3525

To remove the line and print the output to standard out:

sed '/pattern to match/d' ./infile

To directly modify the file – does not work with BSD sed:

sed -i '/pattern to match/d' ./infile

Same, but for BSD sed (Mac OS X and FreeBSD) – does not work with GNU sed:

sed -i '' '/pattern to match/d' ./infile

To directly modify the file (and create a backup) – works with BSD and GNU sed:

sed -i.bak '/pattern to match/d' ./infile
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  • 2
    How do I know what version of sed I have? GNU or non GNU? Mar 23, 2011 at 20:39
  • I dont't know why, but the least command resulted in an empty file :(
    – marquies
    Oct 4, 2015 at 21:49
  • 1
    With GNU sed 4,2,2, the -i '' doesn't work at all. It then treats the pattern to match as the filename. Just remove the ''.
    – hookenz
    Oct 19, 2015 at 22:29
  • 1
    on ubuntu sed -i.bak "/str/d" ./infile deletes my entire file.
    – chovy
    Mar 16, 2016 at 6:18
  • 7
    Note that if your pattern will contain forward slashes, you can use an alternate pattern delimiter but must then escape the first one, e.g.: sed -i.bak "\#$pattern_variable_containing_slashes#d" ./infile
    – Eric
    Mar 16, 2016 at 21:37
725

There are many other ways to delete lines with specific string besides sed:

AWK

awk '!/pattern/' file > temp && mv temp file

Ruby (1.9+)

ruby -i.bak -ne 'print if not /test/' file

Perl

perl -ni.bak -e "print unless /pattern/" file

Shell (bash 3.2 and later)

while read -r line
do
  [[ ! $line =~ pattern ]] && echo "$line"
done <file > o
mv o file

GNU grep

grep -v "pattern" file > temp && mv temp file

And of course sed (printing the inverse is faster than actual deletion):

sed -n '/pattern/!p' file
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  • 4
    how to delete a particular line with a pattern and also the line immediately above it? I have a fine with thousands of such lines in between different data. Aug 6, 2013 at 22:41
  • 2
    On OS/X, the shell variation doesn't preserve leading spaces, but the grep -v variation worked well for me. Feb 3, 2014 at 23:31
  • 18
    the sed example have a different behaviour, it only greps! it should be something like sed -n -i '/pattern/!p' file.
    – caesarsol
    Mar 28, 2014 at 16:41
  • 11
    The grep version does not work when every line matches the pattern. Better do: grep -v "pattern" file > temp; mv temp file This might apply to some of the other examples depending on the return value.
    – Chris Maes
    Jun 20, 2014 at 14:43
  • 5
    "printing the inverse is faster than actual deletion" - Not on my machine (2012 MacBook Air, OS X 10.13.2). Create file: seq -f %f 10000000 >foo.txt. sed d: time sed -i '' '/6543210/d' foo.txt real 0m9.294s. sed !p: time sed -i '' -n '/6543210/!p' foo.txt real 0m13.671s. (For smaller files, the difference is larger.) Jan 22, 2018 at 2:11
335

You can use sed to replace lines in place in a file. However, it seems to be much slower than using grep for the inverse into a second file and then moving the second file over the original.

e.g.

sed -i '/pattern/d' filename      

or

grep -v "pattern" filename > filename2; mv filename2 filename

The first command takes 3 times longer on my machine anyway.

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  • 32
    Voting up your answer too, just because you tried a performance comparison!
    – anuragw
    Apr 12, 2013 at 7:11
  • 6
    +1 for offering option to overwrite current file with the grep line.
    – Rhyuk
    May 6, 2013 at 20:43
  • 3
    The second 'grep' solution is also better for large files
    – simoes
    Jan 2, 2014 at 4:50
  • 3
    I'm curious what the performance difference would be if it were sed '/pattern/d' filename > filename2; mv filename2 filename
    – Pete
    Apr 8, 2014 at 1:00
  • 14
    (using ubuntu's /usr/share/dict/words) grep and mv: 0.010s | sed in place: 0.197s | sed and mv: 0.031s Feb 10, 2015 at 14:22
110

The easy way to do it, with GNU sed:

sed --in-place '/some string here/d' yourfile
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  • 83
    A handy tip for others who stumble on this Q&A thread and are new to shell scripting: Short options are fine for one-time uses on the command line, but long options should be preferred in scripts since they're more readable.
    – Dennis
    Jan 12, 2015 at 10:45
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    +1 for the --in-place flag. I need to test that out on permissions protected files. (have to do some user scrubbing.)
    – Bee Kay
    May 19, 2015 at 21:06
  • 10
    Note that the long option is only available on GNU sed. Mac and BSD users will need to install gsed to do it this way.
    – Matt
    May 18, 2016 at 14:31
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    Another tip: if your regex doesn't appear to match, try the -r option (or -E, depending on your version). This enables the use of regex metacharacters +, ?, {...} and (...).
    – rjh
    Sep 17, 2019 at 18:17
  • This is the correct answer when your disk no have more space and you can't copy the text to another file. This command do what was questioned? Dec 26, 2019 at 13:39
46

You may consider using ex (which is a standard Unix command-based editor):

ex +g/match/d -cwq file

where:

  • + executes given Ex command (man ex), same as -c which executes wq (write and quit)
  • g/match/d - Ex command to delete lines with given match, see: Power of g

The above example is a POSIX-compliant method for in-place editing a file as per this post at Unix.SE and POSIX specifications for ex.


The difference with sed is that:

sed is a Stream EDitor, not a file editor.BashFAQ

Unless you enjoy unportable code, I/O overhead and some other bad side effects. So basically some parameters (such as in-place/-i) are non-standard FreeBSD extensions and may not be available on other operating systems.

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  • 5
    that's great... when I do man ex it gives me the man for vim, it seems ex is part of vim... if I understood right that means the pattern syntax for match is vimregex.com which is similar but different to POSIX and PCRE flavours?
    – Anentropic
    Nov 15, 2015 at 19:50
  • 1
    :g is POSIX-compliant command with some slight differences. I assume PCRE was based on it.
    – kenorb
    Jan 7, 2016 at 10:24
  • @kenorb "I/O overhead and some other bad side effects" could you elaborate? AFAIK ex is using a temp file, just like every other sane tool, besides idk using dd
    – CervEd
    Jan 6, 2022 at 23:47
28

I was struggling with this on Mac. Plus, I needed to do it using variable replacement.

So I used:

sed -i '' "/$pattern/d" $file

where $file is the file where deletion is needed and $pattern is the pattern to be matched for deletion.

I picked the '' from this comment.

The thing to note here is use of double quotes in "/$pattern/d". Variable won't work when we use single quotes.

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  • 4
    Mac sed requires a parameter after -i, so if you don't want a backup, you still have to add an empty string: -i ''
    – wisbucky
    Jan 12, 2017 at 0:51
  • 2
    For shell use sed -i "/$pattern/d" $file . Thank you for your answer.
    – Ashwaq
    Jul 3, 2019 at 7:01
23

You can also use this:

 grep -v 'pattern' filename

Here -v will print only other than your pattern (that means invert match).

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18

To get a inplace like result with grep you can do this:

echo "$(grep -v "pattern" filename)" >filename
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  • 4
    This is only good for the bash shell or similar (not tcsh).
    – esmit
    Jun 24, 2015 at 17:00
16

I have made a small benchmark with a file which contains approximately 345 000 lines. The way with grep seems to be around 15 times faster than the sed method in this case.

I have tried both with and without the setting LC_ALL=C, it does not seem change the timings significantly. The search string (CDGA_00004.pdbqt.gz.tar) is somewhere in the middle of the file.

Here are the commands and the timings:

time sed -i "/CDGA_00004.pdbqt.gz.tar/d" /tmp/input.txt

real    0m0.711s
user    0m0.179s
sys     0m0.530s

time perl -ni -e 'print unless /CDGA_00004.pdbqt.gz.tar/' /tmp/input.txt

real    0m0.105s
user    0m0.088s
sys     0m0.016s

time (grep -v CDGA_00004.pdbqt.gz.tar /tmp/input.txt > /tmp/input.tmp; mv /tmp/input.tmp /tmp/input.txt )

real    0m0.046s
user    0m0.014s
sys     0m0.019s
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  • Which platform are you on? Which versions of sed/perl/grep do you use?
    – hagello
    Feb 21, 2018 at 6:01
  • The platform I use is Linux (Gentoo). The sed version is GNU sed v 4.2.2, the perl version perl 5 (I cant tell which revision I used at the time of the test), and grep (GNU) is version 3.0.
    – Jadzia
    Feb 21, 2018 at 11:56
16

Delete lines from all files that match the match

grep -rl 'text_to_search' . | xargs sed -i '/text_to_search/d'
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SED:

AWK:

GREP:

7

You can also delete a range of lines in a file. For example to delete stored procedures in a SQL file.

sed '/CREATE PROCEDURE.*/,/END ;/d' sqllines.sql

This will remove all lines between CREATE PROCEDURE and END ;.

I have cleaned up many sql files withe this sed command.

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perl -i    -nle'/regexp/||print' file1 file2 file3
perl -i.bk -nle'/regexp/||print' file1 file2 file3

The first command edits the file(s) inplace (-i).

The second command does the same thing but keeps a copy or backup of the original file(s) by adding .bk to the file names (.bk can be changed to anything).

4

echo -e "/thing_to_delete\ndd\033:x\n" | vim file_to_edit.txt

4

Curiously enough, the accepted answer does not actually answer the question directly. The question asks about using sed to replace a string, but the answer seems to presuppose knowledge of how to convert an arbitrary string into a regex.

Many programming language libraries have a function to perform such a transformation, e.g.

python: re.escape(STRING)
ruby: Regexp.escape(STRING)
java:  Pattern.quote(STRING)

But how to do it on the command line?

Since this is a sed-oriented question, one approach would be to use sed itself:

sed 's/\([\[/({.*+^$?]\)/\\\1/g'

So given an arbitrary string $STRING we could write something like:

re=$(sed 's/\([\[({.*+^$?]\)/\\\1/g' <<< "$STRING")
sed "/$re/d" FILE

or as a one-liner:

 sed "/$(sed 's/\([\[/({.*+^$?]\)/\\\1/g' <<< "$STRING")/d" 

with variations as described elsewhere on this page.

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  • Where's the target file path in the last syntax?
    – Sam Sirry
    Feb 22, 2023 at 0:45
4

I found most of the answers not useful for me, If you use vim I found this very easy and straightforward:

:g/<pattern>/d

Source

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  • if your comfortable with vim as opposed to sed you can use ex stackoverflow.com/a/33186317 beware that it's slower. What's nice about vim is you can \v<pattern> to avoid backslashitis
    – CervEd
    Jan 6, 2022 at 23:52
3

Just in case someone wants to do it for exact matches of strings, you can use the -w flag in grep - w for whole. That is, for example if you want to delete the lines that have number 11, but keep the lines with number 111:

-bash-4.1$ head file
1
11
111

-bash-4.1$ grep -v "11" file
1

-bash-4.1$ grep -w -v "11" file
1
111

It also works with the -f flag if you want to exclude several exact patterns at once. If "blacklist" is a file with several patterns on each line that you want to delete from "file":

grep -w -v -f blacklist file
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  • 1
    A bit misleading. -w, --word-regexp Select only those lines containing matches that form whole words. vs. -x, --line-regexp Select only those matches that exactly match the whole line. For a regular expression pattern, this is like parenthesizing the pattern and then surrounding it with ^ and $.
    – Sai
    Oct 23, 2017 at 13:34
3

to show the treated text in console

cat filename | sed '/text to remove/d' 

to save treated text into a file

cat filename | sed '/text to remove/d' > newfile

to append treated text info an existing file

cat filename | sed '/text to remove/d' >> newfile

to treat already treated text, in this case remove more lines of what has been removed

cat filename | sed '/text to remove/d' | sed '/remove this too/d' | more

the | more will show text in chunks of one page at a time.

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  • 1
    With -i you can edit the file in place: sed -i '/text to remove/d' filename is the same as cat filename | sed '/text to remove/d' Jan 28, 2023 at 12:49
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cat filename | grep -v "pattern" > filename.1
mv filename.1 filename
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  • You're overwriting a file while it's still in use. Jun 28, 2018 at 16:37
  • @DavorCubranic fixed Jun 29, 2018 at 16:45
1

You can use good old ed to edit a file in a similar fashion to the answer that uses ex. The big difference in this case is that ed takes its commands via standard input, not as command line arguments like ex can. When using it in a script, the usual way to accomodate this is to use printf to pipe commands to it:

printf "%s\n" "g/pattern/d" w | ed -s filename

or with a heredoc:

ed -s filename <<EOF
g/pattern/d
w
EOF
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  • I think this is the first time I've seen the standard editor recommended as a solution.
    – Eric
    Nov 2, 2023 at 16:05
  • how different is sed than ed here, really?
    – Jason
    Dec 19, 2023 at 23:37
1

This solution is for doing the same operation on multiple file.

for file in *.txt; do grep -v "Matching Text" $file > temp_file.txt; mv temp_file.txt $file; done

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