1

I have a file which contents are like the following:

{application_name, [
    {settings, [
        {generic_1, [
            {key_1, "value"},
            {key_2, 1},
            {key_3, [something, other]}
        ]},
        {generic_2, [
            {key_1, "value"},
            {key_3, [something, other]}
        ]},
        {{generic_2, specific_1}, [
            {key_3, [entirely, different]}
        ]},
    ]}
]}

Now I'm looking for a way to parse this using awk or sed (or something else). What I need is to be able to specify a key, and then get the "blockname" returned.

f.e. if I want all settings for key_3 returned as follows:

generic_1 [something, other]
generic_2 [something, other]
specific_1 [entirely, different]

What would be the best way to approach this?

1
  • 5
    The best way? Don't use awk or sed, which are geared toward line-oriented data, not structured formats like JSON.
    – chepner
    Apr 30, 2014 at 19:58

2 Answers 2

8

The best solution for how to parse JSON data with sed or awk is... not to do that with sed or awk. They aren't designed for it.

Use a tool that understands JSON like

  1. perl
  2. python
  3. ruby
  4. javascript
  5. jq
  6. Just about anything else

Using anything like sed or awk on this is going to be fragile (at best).

0

I do agree with Etan that this is a job for another tools.
This is an gnu awk approach (due to multiple characters in RS), not a complete solution.

awk -v RS="generic_[0-9]" 'NR==1 {f=RT;next} {$1=$1;n=split($0,a,"[][]");if (a[1]~/}/) {split(a[1],b,"[ }]");f=b[2]};printf "%s [",f;for (i=1;i<=n;i++) if (a[i]~/key_3/) print a[i+1]"]";f=RT}' file
generic_1 [something, other]
generic_2 [something, other]
specific_1 [entirely, different]

Or some more readable:

awk -v RS="generic_[0-9]" '
NR==1 {
    f=RT
    next} 
    {
    $1=$1
    n=split($0,a,"[][]")
    if (a[1]~/}/) {
        split(a[1],b,"[ }]")
        f=b[2]}
    printf "%s [",f
    for (i=1;i<=n;i++)
        if (a[i]~/key_3/)
            print a[i+1]"]"
            f=RT
    }' file

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.