Suppose I have some output from a command (such as ls -1
):
a
b
c
d
e
...
I want to apply a command (say echo
) to each one, in turn. E.g.
echo a
echo b
echo c
echo d
echo e
...
What's the easiest way to do that in bash?
It's probably easiest to use xargs
. In your case:
ls -1 | xargs -L1 echo
The -L
flag ensures the input is read properly. From the man page of xargs
:
-L number
Call utility for every number non-empty lines read.
A line ending with a space continues to the next non-empty line. [...]
ls | xargs -L2 echo
and ls -1 | xargs -L2 echo
give two different outputs. The former being all on one line.
Apr 26, 2010 at 4:03
xargs
can run only executable files not shell functions or shell built-in commands. For the former the best solution is probably the one with read
in a loop.
Aug 27, 2013 at 12:31
You can use a basic prepend operation on each line:
ls -1 | while read line ; do echo $line ; done
Or you can pipe the output to sed for more complex operations:
ls -1 | sed 's/^\(.*\)$/echo \1/'
sh: cho: not found a sh: cho: not found
Looks like it's taking the e
in echo to be a sed command or something.
Apr 26, 2010 at 3:40
while
loop. cmd1 | while read line; do cmd2 $line; done
. Or while read line; do cmd2 $line; done < <(cmd1)
which doesn't create a subshell. This is the simplified version of your sed
command: sed 's/.*/echo &/'
Apr 26, 2010 at 3:45
"$line"
in the while loop, in order to avoid word splitting.
read -r line
to prevent read
messing with escaped characters. For example echo '"a \"nested\" quote"' | while read line; do echo "$line"; done
gives "a "nested" quote"
, which has lost its escaping. If we do echo '"a \"nested\" quote"' | while read -r line; do echo "$line"; done
we get "a \"nested\" quote"
as expected. See wiki.bash-hackers.org/commands/builtin/read
for s in `cmd`; do echo $s; done
If cmd has a large output:
cmd | xargs -L1 echo
You can use a for loop:
for file in * ; do echo "$file" done
Note that if the command in question accepts multiple arguments, then using xargs is almost always more efficient as it only has to spawn the utility in question once instead of multiple times.
printf '%s\0' * | xargs -0 ...
-- otherwise, it's quite unsafe with filenames with whitespace, quotes, etc.
May 4, 2016 at 15:31
A solution that works with filenames that have spaces in them, is:
ls -1 | xargs -I %s echo %s
The following is equivalent, but has a clearer divide between the precursor and what you actually want to do:
ls -1 | xargs -I %s -- echo %s
Where echo
is whatever it is you want to run, and the subsequent %s
is the filename.
Thanks to Chris Jester-Young's answer on a duplicate question.
You actually can use sed to do it, provided it is GNU sed.
... | sed 's/match/command \0/e'
How it works:
cat /logs/lfa/Modified.trace.log.20150904.pw | sed -r 's/^(.*)(\|006\|00032\|)(.*)$/echo "\1\2\3 - ID `shuf -i 999-14999 -n 1`"/e'
xargs fails with with backslashes, quotes. It needs to be something like
ls -1 |tr \\n \\0 |xargs -0 -iTHIS echo "THIS is a file."
xargs -0 option:
-0, --null Input items are terminated by a null character instead of by whitespace, and the quotes and backslash are not special (every character is taken literally). Disables the end of file string, which is treated like any other argument. Useful when input items might contain white space, quote marks, or backslashes. The GNU find -print0 option produces input suitable for this mode.
ls -1
terminates the items with newline characters, so tr
translates them into null characters.
This approach is about 50 times slower than iterating manually with for ...
(see Michael Aaron Safyans answer) (3.55s vs. 0.066s). But for other input commands like locate, find, reading from a file (tr \\n \\0 <file
) or similar, you have to work with xargs
like this.
| xargs-s -0 -I something echo "something is my file"
Sep 22, 2022 at 10:41
i like to use gawk for running multiple commands on a list, for instance
ls -l | gawk '{system("/path/to/cmd.sh "$1)}'
however the escaping of the escapable characters can get a little hairy.
Better result for me:
ls -1 | xargs -L1 -d "\n" CMD
find . -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -print0 | xargs -0 command
will handle cases where the output of ls -1
is ambiguous; use -printf '%P\0'
rather than -print0
if you don't want a leading ./
on each.
May 4, 2016 at 15:33
This question is a duplicate of Execute a command once per line of piped input? it seems.
I don’t know if it’s appropriate to post an adapted version of the same answer, since it’s the same question, like everyone else did. I’d prefer to merge the questions (any admin reading this?).
But until then, here we go:
What you are asking for is known as a functor. A mapping function.
Since echo
isn’t a particularly sensible function to apply things to, since things that go in a pipe are already echoed without that pipe, I’ll use the custom function bla()
here.
I also adapted the answer for your ls -1
case.
This should work for everything,
Note the IFS=
and -r
, not included in any other answer:
mapp() { while IFS= read -r line; do "$1" "$line"; done; }
Here’s an example usage:
$ bla() { echo " bla: $1"; }
$ ls -1 | mapp bla
bla: a
bla: b
bla: c
…
For alternative versions and other variants, see my answer to the other question.
ls -1
may be an example here but it is important to remember that it is not good to parse the output ofls
. See: mywiki.wooledge.org/ParsingLs