As I explain in this question on SuperUser, you can achieve this using the technique outlined by Tom Zych in his comment.
bigfile="mybigfile-100Mb"
chunkprefix="chunk_"
# Chunk offsets
OneMegabyte=1048576
chunkoffsets=(0 $((OneMegabyte*20)) $((OneMegabyte*60)) $((OneMegabyte*70)))
currentchunk=$((${#chunkoffsets[@]}-1))
while [ $currentchunk -ge 0 ]; do
# Print current chunk number, so we know it is still running.
echo -n "$currentchunk "
offset=${chunkoffsets[$currentchunk]}
# Copy end of $archive to new file
tail -c +$((offset+1)) "$bigfile" > "$chunkprefix$currentchunk"
# Chop end of $archive
truncate -s $offset "$archive"
currentchunk=$((currentchunk-1))
done
You need to give the script the starting position (offset in bytes, zero means a chunk starting at bigfile's first byte) of each chunk, in ascending order, like on the fifth line.
If necessary, automate it using seq : The following command will give a chunkoffsets with one chunk at 0, then one starting at 100k, then one for every megabyte for the range 1--10Mb, (note the -1 for the last parameter, so it is excluded) then one chunk every two megabytes for the range 10--20Mb.
OneKilobyte=1024
OneMegabyte=$((1024*OneKilobyte))
chunkoffsets=(0 $((100*OneKilobyte)) $(seq $OneMegabyte $OneMegabyte $((10*OneMegabyte-1))) $(seq $((10*OneMegabyte-1)) $((2*OneMegabyte)) $((20*OneMegabyte-1))))
To see which chunks you have set :
for offset in "${chunkoffsets[@]}"; do echo "$offset"; done
0
102400
1048576
2097152
3145728
4194304
5242880
6291456
7340032
8388608
9437184
10485759
12582911
14680063
16777215
18874367
20971519
This technique has the drawback that it needs at least the size of the largest chunk available (you can mitigate that by making smaller chunks, and concatenating them somewhere else, though). Also, it will copy all the data, so it's nowhere near instant.
As to the fact that some hardware video recorders (PVRs) manage to split videos within seconds, they probably only store a list of offsets for each video (a.k.a. chapters), and display these as independent videos in their user interface.
truncate()to remove that part from the input file, and repeat. The input file ends up as the chunk at the beginning. This only takes extra space equal to the size of a chunk. Uses almost as much time as the naive approach, but less space. – Tom Zych Sep 8 '11 at 8:53