7

I have an input stream, and I want to "map" to output lines. For instance, if my input stream were the files nums, I'd want that this syntax

$ cat nums
9534
2343
1093
7023
$ cat nums | map ./myscript $0

would be equivalent to

$ echo 9534 | ./myscript
$ echo 2343 | ./myscript
$ echo 1093 | ./myscript
$ echo 7023 | ./myscript

4 Answers 4

5

I think xargs is the closest thing to your hypothetical map:

cat nums | xargs -n1 ./myscript

or

cat nums | xargs -n1 -J ARG ./myscript ARG

or

cat nums | xargs -I ARG ./myscript ARG

Unfortunately, xargs doesn't let you invoke things that read from stdin, so you'd have to rewrite your script to accept a command-line argument rather than reading from stdin.

3
  • Specifically, I have a text file where most lines are IP addresses, and for each one, I want to execute a wget command and replace that line of text with the response text from wget. Mar 26, 2012 at 23:37
  • Ah, cool! I didn't know you could use the -n1 switch to limit the number of arguments per line. Mar 26, 2012 at 23:39
  • 1
    You might also want to look at GNU parallel, which is not a standard UNIX utility, but is similar to xargs: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_(software) Mar 27, 2012 at 14:01
3
#!/bin/bash
while read -r line
do
  "$@" <<< "$line"
done
1
  • Indeed, a simple script would do what I'm talking about. I was curious, though, if a command line utility exists. Mar 26, 2012 at 23:57
0

You could use a bash script to do this. Something like:

#!/bin/bash

string="| ./myscript"

echo "9534 $string"
echo "2343 $string"
echo "1093 $string"
echo "7023 $string"

Or, you could easily fill an array with your numerical values and just do this all in one loop.

2
  • I know, but I was hoping for a way to parse by line. Mar 26, 2012 at 23:35
  • I know that there used to be old text-based command-line games that did something like what you're talking about. Also, I suppose, VI and EMACS must be able to do what you're wanting. Mar 27, 2012 at 0:16
0

With GNU Parallel it looks like:

$ cat nums | parallel -N1 --pipe ./myscript

which is equivalent to

$ echo 9534 | ./myscript
$ echo 2343 | ./myscript
$ echo 1093 | ./myscript
$ echo 7023 | ./myscript

Or you can do:

$ cat nums | parallel ./myscript

which is equivalent to

$ ./myscript 9534
$ ./myscript 2343
$ ./myscript 1093
$ ./myscript 7023

The jobs will run in parallel (one job per core) until all jobs are done.

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