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I want to split my text file by line count

ex

GenTextFile.txt have 3000 line I want split to

GenText_Output_1.txt >> 1000 line (line 1 - 1000)

GenText_Output_2.txt >> 1000 line (line 1001 - 2000)

GenText_Output_3.txt >> 1000 line (line 2001 - 3000)

get 3 parameter input from console are input name, output name, line count to split

but when I execute, It have a problem

/devhome/See/Split_file > ./shell_call_awk.sh GenTextFile.txt GenText_Output  1000
awk: syntax error near line 1
awk: bailing out near line 1
awk: can't open in_name

Am I doing something wrong?

-- Here my code --

#!/bin/ksh

#echo "input name : $1"
#echo "output name : $2"
#echo "line split : $3"

input_name=$1
output_name=$2
line_split=$3

awk -v "in_name=$input_name" -v "out_name=$output_name" -v "line=$line_split"
awk 'NR%line==1{x=++i;}{print > out_name"_"x".txt"}' in_name

exit 1;

Thanks.

7
  • Any reason you're not just using the split command?
    – Barmar
    Sep 19, 2013 at 4:33
  • @Barmar I've used the split command the result of file name are -> filenameaa,filenameab,filenameac.... but I want the result name are -> filename1, filename2, filename3.... I'm a newbie of shellscript and I don't know the way to use the split command then the results are as desired.
    – Khana
    Sep 19, 2013 at 6:35
  • Have you looked at the man page? Doesn't the --numeric-suffixes option do what you want?
    – Barmar
    Sep 19, 2013 at 6:39
  • can you show an example of command? I read man page but not found "--numeric-suffixes" option I found this pattern. split [-linecount | -l linecount] [-a suffixlength] [ file [name]] split [ -b n | nk | nm] [-a suffixlength] [ file [name]]
    – Khana
    Sep 19, 2013 at 7:21
  • Sorry, I assumed you had the GNU version of split. which is found on most Linux systems.
    – Barmar
    Sep 19, 2013 at 7:23

2 Answers 2

3

You need to do it in just one awk command, not two separate commands. And the input file doesn't need to be an awk variable, it's just a command line argument.

awk -v "out_name=$output_name" -v "line=$line_split" 'NR%line==1{x=++i;}{print > (out_name"_"x".txt")}' "$input_name"

You can also use the split command (this requires the version from GNU coreutils):

split --numeric-suffixes --lines=$line_split "$input_name" "$output_name"_
2
  • Thank you for reply but still error /devhome/See/Split_file > ./shell_call_awk.sh file2.txt outputxxx 5 awk: syntax error near line 1 awk: bailing out near line 1 If this way doesn't work, is there another way?
    – Khana
    Sep 19, 2013 at 6:51
  • The filename expression after > needs to be in parentheses to get the precedence correct.
    – Barmar
    Sep 19, 2013 at 7:06
0

I try to follow, but the problem persists.

awk: syntax error near line 1.
awk: bailing out near line 1.

And I was found a solution here

Solaris is well known for the fact that the some commands under /bin /usr/bin are not POSIX compliant. Instead they have additional compliant versions under /usr/xpg4 and similar hierarchies.

Thus, under Solaris you can use just:

/usr/xpg4/bin/awk -v NAME=MACHINE '$1 == NAME'  /etc/hosts 

Under Solaris 10 this works.

When I use the command man awk, I found that I was running SunOS 5.9.

Then I replace awk with usr/xpg4/bin/awk

It worked!

@Barmar Thank you very much for the advice about awk command line.

-- This is my code --

input_name=$1
output_name=$2
line_split=$3

/usr/xpg4/bin/awk -v "out_name=$output_name" -v "line=$line_split" 'NR%line==1{x=++i;}{print > out_name""x".txt"}' ${input_name}

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