229

Say, I have a file foo.txt specifying N arguments

arg1
arg2
...
argN

which I need to pass to the command my_command

How do I use the lines of a file as arguments of a command?

2
  • 16
    "arguments", plural, or "argument", single? The accepted answer is correct only in the single-argument case -- which is what the body text inquires about -- but not in the multi-argument case, on which the topic appears to inquire. Jun 5, 2014 at 12:43
  • The 4 answers below usually have identical results, yet they have slightly different semantics. Now I remember why I stopped writing bash scripts :P
    – Navin
    Jan 7, 2016 at 15:15

12 Answers 12

308

If your shell is bash (amongst others), a shortcut for $(cat afile) is $(< afile), so you'd write:

mycommand "$(< file.txt)"

Documented in the bash man page in the 'Command Substitution' section.

Alterately, have your command read from stdin, so: mycommand < file.txt

11
  • 25
    To be pedantic, it's not a shortcut to use the < operator. It means that the shell itself will perform the redirection rather than executing the cat binary for it's redirection properties.
    – lstyls
    Oct 30, 2017 at 23:48
  • 2
    It's a kernel setting so you'd need to recompile the kernel. Or investigate the xargs command Nov 24, 2017 at 13:57
  • 4
    @ykaner because without "$(…)", the contents of file.txt would be passed to the standard input of mycommand, not as an argument. "$(…)" means run the command and give back the output as a string; here the “command” only reads the file but it could be more complex. Feb 7, 2019 at 13:39
  • 9
    It's not working for me unless I lose the quotes. With the quotes, it takes the whole file as 1 argument. Without quotes, it interprets each line as a separate arg.
    – Pete
    Jun 29, 2019 at 2:57
  • 1
    @lstyls: I'm not sure what you mean by "it's not a shortcut." Having the shell perform the redirection instead of spawning a child cat process sounds like it would save resources. The ref man describes this substitution as "equivalent but faster." Maybe you mean "it's not just a shorter way of typing the same thing"?
    – LarsH
    Nov 19, 2019 at 22:53
45

As already mentioned, you can use the backticks or $(cat filename).

What was not mentioned, and I think is important to note, is that you must remember that the shell will break apart the contents of that file according to whitespace, giving each "word" it finds to your command as an argument. And while you may be able to enclose a command-line argument in quotes so that it can contain whitespace, escape sequences, etc., reading from the file will not do the same thing. For example, if your file contains:

a "b c" d

the arguments you will get are:

a
"b
c"
d

If you want to pull each line as an argument, use the while/read/do construct:

while read i ; do command_name $i ; done < filename
2
  • I should have mentioned, I am assuming that you are using bash. I realize that there are other shells out there, but almost all of the *nix machines I have worked on either ran bash or some equivalent. IIRC, this syntax should work the same on ksh and zsh.
    – Will
    Nov 19, 2010 at 21:43
  • 1
    Read should be read -r unless you want to expand backslash-escape sequences -- and NUL is a safer delimiter to use than the newline, particularly if the arguments you're passing are things like filenames, which can contain literal newlines. Also, without clearing IFS, you get leading and trailing whitespace implicitly cleared from i. Jun 5, 2014 at 12:41
33
command `< file`

will pass file contents to the command on stdin, but will strip newlines, meaning you couldn't iterate over each line individually. For that you could write a script with a 'for' loop:

for line in `cat input_file`; do some_command "$line"; done

Or (the multi-line variant):

for line in `cat input_file`
do
    some_command "$line"
done

Or (multi-line variant with $() instead of ``):

for line in $(cat input_file)
do
    some_command "$line"
done

References:

  1. For loop syntax: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-for-loop/
7
  • Also, putting < file in backticks means it doesn't actually perform a redirection for command at all. May 30, 2017 at 17:25
  • 4
    (Did the people who upvoted this actually test it? command `< file` doesn't work in either bash or POSIX sh; zsh is a different matter, but that's not the shell this question is about). Jul 8, 2017 at 13:42
  • @CharlesDuffy Can you be more specific about how it doesn't work?
    – mwfearnley
    Apr 26, 2018 at 11:12
  • @CharlesDuffy This does work in bash 3.2 and zsh 5.3. This won't work in sh, ash and dash, but neither $(< file).
    – Arnie97
    Aug 16, 2019 at 1:36
  • 1
    @mwfearnley, happy to provide that specificity. The goal is to iterate over lines, right? Put Hello World on one line. You'll see it first run some_command Hello, then some_command World, not some_command "Hello World" or some_command Hello World. Aug 16, 2019 at 2:26
16

You do that using backticks:

echo World > file.txt
echo Hello `cat file.txt`
2
  • 4
    This doesn't create an argument -- because it isn't quoted, it's subject to string-splitting, so if you emitted echo "Hello * Starry * World" > file.txt in the first step, you'd get at least four separate arguments passed to the second command -- and likely more, as the *s would expand to the names of files present in the current directory. Jul 8, 2017 at 13:41
  • 3
    ...and because it's running glob expansion, it doesn't emit exactly what's in the file. And because it's performing a command substitution operation, it's extremely inefficient -- it's actually fork()ing off a subshell with a FIFO attached to its stdout, then invoking /bin/cat as a child of that subshell, then reading the output through the FIFO; compare to $(<file.txt), which reads the file's contents into bash directly with no subshells or FIFOs involved. Jul 8, 2017 at 13:43
15

If you want to do this in a robust way that works for every possible command line argument (values with spaces, values with newlines, values with literal quote characters, non-printable values, values with glob characters, etc), it gets a bit more interesting.


To write to a file, given an array of arguments:

printf '%s\0' "${arguments[@]}" >file

...replace with "argument one", "argument two", etc. as appropriate.


To read from that file and use its contents (in bash, ksh93, or another recent shell with arrays):

declare -a args=()
while IFS='' read -r -d '' item; do
  args+=( "$item" )
done <file
run_your_command "${args[@]}"

To read from that file and use its contents (in a shell without arrays; note that this will overwrite your local command-line argument list, and is thus best done inside of a function, such that you're overwriting the function's arguments and not the global list):

set --
while IFS='' read -r -d '' item; do
  set -- "$@" "$item"
done <file
run_your_command "$@"

Note that -d (allowing a different end-of-line delimiter to be used) is a non-POSIX extension, and a shell without arrays may also not support it. Should that be the case, you may need to use a non-shell language to transform the NUL-delimited content into an eval-safe form:

quoted_list() {
  ## Works with either Python 2.x or 3.x
  python -c '
import sys, pipes, shlex
quote = pipes.quote if hasattr(pipes, "quote") else shlex.quote
print(" ".join([quote(s) for s in sys.stdin.read().split("\0")][:-1]))
  '
}

eval "set -- $(quoted_list <file)"
run_your_command "$@"
9

If all you need to do is to turn file arguments.txt with contents

arg1
arg2
argN

into my_command arg1 arg2 argN then you can simply use xargs:

xargs -a arguments.txt my_command

You can put additional static arguments in the xargs call, like xargs -a arguments.txt my_command staticArg which will call my_command staticArg arg1 arg2 argN

1
  • It's only missing -d '\n', or else won't work for lines with spaces in the file
    – awvalenti
    Aug 21, 2022 at 19:48
7

None of the answers seemed to work for me or were too complicated. Luckily, it's not complicated with xargs (Tested on Ubuntu 20.04).

This works with each arg on a separate line in the file as the OP mentions and was what I needed as well.

cat foo.txt | xargs my_command

One thing to note is that it doesn't seem to work with aliased commands.

The accepted answer works if the command accepts multiple args wrapped in a string. In my case using (Neo)Vim it does not and the args are all stuck together.

xargs does it properly and actually gives you separate arguments supplied to the command.

1
  • < foo.txt xargs my_command or xargs < foo.txt my_command, the redirection can be anywhere. You may want to < foo xargs -d \\n cmd or < foo tr \\n \\0 | xargs -0 cmd for BSD
    – CervEd
    Jun 1, 2023 at 9:12
6

Here's how I pass contents of a file as an argument to a command:

./foo --bar "$(cat ./bar.txt)"
1
  • 1
    This is -- but for being substantially less efficient -- effectively equivalent to $(<bar.txt) (when using a shell, such as bash, with the appropriate extension). $(<foo) is a special case: unlike regular command substitution, as used in $(cat ...), it doesn't fork off a subshell to operate in, and thus avoids a great deal of overhead. Aug 24, 2017 at 21:51
3

I suggest using:

command $(echo $(tr '\n' ' ' < parameters.cfg))

Simply trim the end-line characters and replace them with spaces, and then push the resulting string as possible separate arguments with echo.

1
2

In my bash shell the following worked like a charm:

cat input_file | xargs -I % sh -c 'command1 %; command2 %; command3 %;'

where input_file is

arg1
arg2
arg3

As evident, this allows you to execute multiple commands with each line from input_file, a nice little trick I learned here.

3
  • 3
    Your "nice little trick" is dangerous from a security perspective -- if you have an argument containing $(somecommand), you'll get that command executed rather than passed through as text. Likewise, >/etc/passwd will be processed as a redirection and overwrite /etc/passwd (if run with appropriate permissions), etc. May 30, 2017 at 17:22
  • 2
    It's much safer to do the following instead (on a system with GNU extensions): xargs -d $'\n' sh -c 'for arg; do command1 "$arg"; command2 "arg"; command3 "arg"; done' _ -- and also more efficient, since it passes as many arguments to each shell as possible rather than starting one shell per line in your input file. May 30, 2017 at 17:24
  • And of course, lose the useless use of cat
    – tripleee
    Aug 9, 2019 at 11:05
2

Both solutions work even when lines have spaces:

readarray -t my_args < foo.txt
my_command "${my_args[@]}"

if readarray doesn't work, replace it with mapfile, they're synonyms.

I formerly tried this one below, but had problems when my_command was a script:

xargs -d '\n' -a foo.txt my_command
0

After editing @Wesley Rice's answer a couple times, I decided my changes were just getting too big to continue changing his answer instead of writing my own. So, I decided I need to write my own!

Read each line of a file in and operate on it line-by-line like this:

#!/bin/bash
input="/path/to/txt/file"
while IFS= read -r line
do
  echo "$line"
done < "$input"

This comes directly from author Vivek Gite here: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-howto-read-line-by-line-from-file/. He gets the credit!

Syntax: Read file line by line on a Bash Unix & Linux shell:
1. The syntax is as follows for bash, ksh, zsh, and all other shells to read a file line by line
2. while read -r line; do COMMAND; done < input.file
3. The -r option passed to read command prevents backslash escapes from being interpreted.
4. Add IFS= option before read command to prevent leading/trailing whitespace from being trimmed -
5. while IFS= read -r line; do COMMAND_on $line; done < input.file


And now to answer this now-closed question which I also had: Is it possible to `git add` a list of files from a file? - here's my answer:

Note that FILES_STAGED is a variable containing the absolute path to a file which contains a bunch of lines where each line is a relative path to a file I'd like to do git add on. This code snippet is about to become part of the "eRCaGuy_dotfiles/useful_scripts/sync_git_repo_to_build_machine.sh" file in this project, to enable easy syncing of files in development from one PC (ex: a computer I code on) to another (ex: a more powerful computer I build on): https://github.com/ElectricRCAircraftGuy/eRCaGuy_dotfiles.

while IFS= read -r line
do
    echo "  git add \"$line\""
    git add "$line" 
done < "$FILES_STAGED"

References:

  1. Where I copied my answer from: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/unix-howto-read-line-by-line-from-file/
  2. For loop syntax: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/bash-for-loop/

Related:

  1. How to read contents of file line-by-line and do git add on it: Is it possible to `git add` a list of files from a 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.