What's an easy way to read random line from a file in a shell script?
13 Answers
You can use shuf
:
shuf -n 1 $FILE
There is also a utility called rl
. In Debian it's in the randomize-lines
package that does exactly what you want, though not available in all distros. On its home page it actually recommends the use of shuf
instead (which didn't exist when it was created, I believe). shuf
is part of the GNU coreutils, rl
is not.
rl -c 1 $FILE
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2
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5Andalso,
sort -R
is definitely going to make one wait a lot if dealing with considerably huge files -- 80kk lines --, whereas,shuf -n
acts quite instantaneously.– RubensJun 18, 2013 at 6:56 -
23You can get shuf on OS X by installing
coreutils
from Homebrew. Might be calledgshuf
instead ofshuf
. Dec 27, 2013 at 22:27 -
2Similarly, you can use
randomize-lines
on OS X bybrew install randomize-lines; rl -c 1 $FILE
– JamieApr 9, 2014 at 18:03 -
4Note that
shuf
is part of GNU Coreutils and therefore won't necessarily be available (by default) on *BSD systems (or Mac?). @Tracker1's perl one-liner below is more portable (and by my tests, is slightly faster). Dec 19, 2014 at 21:49
Another alternative:
head -$((${RANDOM} % `wc -l < file` + 1)) file | tail -1
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28${RANDOM} only generates numbers less than 32768, so don't use this for large files (for example the English dictionary).– RalfMar 13, 2012 at 20:16
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3This does not give you the precise same probability for every line, due to the modulo operation. This does barely matter if the file length is << 32768 (and not at all if it divides that number), but maybe worth noting.– AnaphoryMar 21, 2014 at 17:58
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11You can extend this to 30-bit random numbers by using
(${RANDOM} << 15) + ${RANDOM}
. This significantly reduces the bias and allows it to work for files containing up to 1 billion lines.– nneonneoJun 19, 2015 at 5:42 -
@nneonneo: Very cool trick, though according to this link it should be OR'ing the ${RANDOM}'s instead of PLUS'ing stackoverflow.com/a/19602060/293064 Jul 12, 2015 at 1:54
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sort --random-sort $FILE | head -n 1
(I like the shuf approach above even better though - I didn't even know that existed and I would have never found that tool on my own)
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10+1 I like it, but you may need a very recent
sort
, didn't work on any of my systems (CentOS 5.5, Mac OS 10.7.2). Also, useless use of cat, could be reduced tosort --random-sort < $FILE | head -n 1
Feb 16, 2012 at 19:02 -
sort -R <<< $'1\n1\n2' | head -1
is as likely to return 1 and 2, becausesort -R
sorts duplicate lines together. The same applies tosort -Ru
, because it removes duplicate lines.– LriSep 15, 2012 at 11:03 -
5This is relatively slow, since the whole file needs to get shuffled by
sort
before piping it tohead
.shuf
selects random lines from the file, instead and is much faster for me.– BengtNov 25, 2012 at 17:33 -
1@SteveKehlet while we're at it,
sort --random-sort $FILE | head
would be best, as it allows it to access the file directly, possibly enabling efficient parallel sorting– WaelJJun 6, 2014 at 18:22 -
5The
--random-sort
and-R
options are specific to GNU sort (so they won't work with BSD or Mac OSsort
). GNU sort learned those flags in 2005 so you need GNU coreutils 6.0 or newer (eg CentOS 6).– RJHunterApr 9, 2015 at 7:09
This is simple.
cat file.txt | shuf -n 1
Granted this is just a tad slower than the "shuf -n 1 file.txt" on its own.
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2Best answer. I didn't know about this command. Note that
-n 1
specifies 1 line, and you can change it to more than 1.shuf
can be used for other things too; I just pipedps aux
andgrep
with it to randomly kill processes partially matching a name.– sudoJan 18, 2017 at 22:53
perlfaq5: How do I select a random line from a file? Here's a reservoir-sampling algorithm from the Camel Book:
perl -e 'srand; rand($.) < 1 && ($line = $_) while <>; print $line;' file
This has a significant advantage in space over reading the whole file in. You can find a proof of this method in The Art of Computer Programming, Volume 2, Section 3.4.2, by Donald E. Knuth.
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1Just for the purposes of inclusion (in case the referred site goes down), here's the code that Tracker1 pointed to: "cat filename | perl -e 'while (<>) { push(@_,$_); } print @_[rand()*@_];';"– AnirvanJan 15, 2009 at 19:16
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3This is a useless use of cat. Here's a slight modification of the code found in perlfaq5 (and courtesy of the Camel book): perl -e 'srand; rand($.) < 1 && ($line = $_) while <>; print $line;' filename Jan 15, 2009 at 21:55
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I just benchmarked an N-lines version of this code against
shuf
. The perl code is very slightly faster (8% faster by user time, 24% faster by system time), though anecdotally I've found the perl code "seems" less random (I wrote a jukebox using it). Dec 17, 2014 at 21:59 -
2More food for thought:
shuf
stores the whole input file in memory, which is a horrible idea, while this code only stores one line, so the limit of this code is a line count of INT_MAX (2^31 or 2^63 depending on your arch), assuming any of its selected potential lines fits in memory. Dec 19, 2014 at 21:58
using a bash script:
#!/bin/bash
# replace with file to read
FILE=tmp.txt
# count number of lines
NUM=$(wc - l < ${FILE})
# generate random number in range 0-NUM
let X=${RANDOM} % ${NUM} + 1
# extract X-th line
sed -n ${X}p ${FILE}
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1Random can be 0, sed needs 1 for the first line. sed -n 0p returns error. Jan 15, 2009 at 19:20
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but even with the bug worth a point, as it does not need perl or python and is as efficient as you can get (reading the file exactly twice but not into memory - so it would work even with huge files). Jan 15, 2009 at 19:28
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@asalamon74: thanks @blabla999: if we make a function out of it, ok for $1, but why not computing NUM? Jan 15, 2009 at 19:28
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Single bash line:
sed -n $((1+$RANDOM%`wc -l test.txt | cut -f 1 -d ' '`))p test.txt
Slight problem: duplicate filename.
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3slighter problem. performing this on /usr/share/dict/words tends to favor words starting with "A". Playing with it, I'm at about 90% "A" words to 10% "B" words. None starting with numbers yet, which make up the head of the file.– bibbySep 30, 2010 at 5:01
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Here's a simple Python script that will do the job:
import random, sys
lines = open(sys.argv[1]).readlines()
print(lines[random.randrange(len(lines))])
Usage:
python randline.py file_to_get_random_line_from
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1This doesn't quite work. It stops after a single line. To make it work, I did this:
import random, sys lines = open(sys.argv[1]).readlines()
for i in range(len(lines)): rand = random.randint(0, len(lines)-1) print lines.pop(rand), Jan 14, 2011 at 20:13 -
Stupid comment system with crappy formatting. Didn't formatting in comments work once upon a time? Jan 14, 2011 at 20:14
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randint is inclusive therefore
len(lines)
may lead to IndexError. You could useprint(random.choice(list(open(sys.argv[1]))))
. There is also memory efficient reservoir sampling algorithm.– jfsSep 24, 2014 at 19:08 -
2
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@MichaelCampbell: reservoir sampling algorithm that I've mentioned above may work with 3TB file (if line size is limited).– jfsSep 26, 2015 at 1:02
Another way using 'awk'
awk NR==$((${RANDOM} % `wc -l < file.name` + 1)) file.name
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2
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That code must read the file (
wc
) in order to get a line count, then must read (part of) the file again (awk
) to get the content of the given random line number. I/O will be far more expensive than getting a random number. My code reads the file once only. The issue with awk'srand()
is that it seeds based on seconds, so you'll get duplicates if you run it consecutively too fast. Dec 19, 2014 at 21:41
A solution that also works on MacOSX, and should also works on Linux(?):
N=5
awk 'NR==FNR {lineN[$1]; next}(FNR in lineN)' <(jot -r $N 1 $(wc -l < $file)) $file
Where:
N
is the number of random lines you wantNR==FNR {lineN[$1]; next}(FNR in lineN) file1 file2
--> save line numbers written infile1
and then print corresponding line infile2
jot -r $N 1 $(wc -l < $file)
--> drawN
numbers randomly (-r
) in range(1, number_of_line_in_file)
withjot
. The process substitution<()
will make it look like a file for the interpreter, sofile1
in previous example.
#!/bin/bash
IFS=$'\n' wordsArray=($(<$1))
numWords=${#wordsArray[@]}
sizeOfNumWords=${#numWords}
while [ True ]
do
for ((i=0; i<$sizeOfNumWords; i++))
do
let ranNumArray[$i]=$(( ( $RANDOM % 10 ) + 1 ))-1
ranNumStr="$ranNumStr${ranNumArray[$i]}"
done
if [ $ranNumStr -le $numWords ]
then
break
fi
ranNumStr=""
done
noLeadZeroStr=$((10#$ranNumStr))
echo ${wordsArray[$noLeadZeroStr]}
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Since $RANDOM generates numbers less than the number of words in /usr/share/dict/words, which has 235886 (on my Mac anyway), I just generate 6 separate random numbers between 0 and 9 and string them together. Then I make sure that number is less than 235886. Then remove leading zeros to index the words that I stored in the array. Since each word is its own line this could easily be used for any file to randomly pick a line.– Ken RoyJun 15, 2017 at 13:01
Here is what I discovery since my Mac OS doesn't use all the easy answers. I used the jot command to generate a number since the $RANDOM variable solutions seems not to be very random in my test. When testing my solution I had a wide variance in the solutions provided in the output.
RANDOM1=`jot -r 1 1 235886`
#range of jot ( 1 235886 ) found from earlier wc -w /usr/share/dict/web2
echo $RANDOM1
head -n $RANDOM1 /usr/share/dict/web2 | tail -n 1
The echo of the variable is to get a visual of the generated random number.
Using only vanilla sed and awk, and without using $RANDOM, a simple, space-efficient and reasonably fast "one-liner" for selecting a single line pseudo-randomly from a file named FILENAME is as follows:
sed -n $(awk 'END {srand(); r=rand()*NR; if (r<NR) {sub(/\..*/,"",r); r++;}; print r}' FILENAME)p FILENAME
(This works even if FILENAME is empty, in which case no line is emitted.)
One possible advantage of this approach is that it only calls rand() once.
As pointed out by @AdamKatz in the comments, another possibility would be to call rand() for each line:
awk 'rand() * NR < 1 { line = $0 } END { print line }' FILENAME
(A simple proof of correctness can be given based on induction.)
Caveat about rand()
"In most awk implementations, including gawk, rand() starts generating numbers from the same starting number, or seed, each time you run awk."
-- https://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/manual/html_node/Numeric-Functions.html
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See the comment I posted a year before this answer, which has a simpler awk solution that doesn't require sed. Also note my caveat about awk's random number generator, which seeds at whole seconds. Mar 19, 2018 at 18:40