The -i
option (alternatively, --in-place
) means that you want files edited in-place, rather than streaming the change to a new place.
Modifying a file in-place suggests a need for a backup file - and so a user-specified extension is expected after -i
, but the parsing of the extension argument is handled differently under GNU sed & Mac (BSD) sed:
- GNU : "If no extension is supplied, the original file is overwritten without making a backup." - effectively, you can omit specify a file extension altogether. The extension must be supplied immediately after the
-i
, with no intervening space.
- Mac (BSD) : "If a zero-length extension is given, no backup will be saved." - you must supply an extension, but it can be the empty string '' if you want, to disable the backup.
So GNU & Mac will interpret this differently:
sed -i 's/hello/bye/g' jkl.txt
- GNU : No extension is supplied immediately after the
-i
, so create no backup, use s/hello/bye/g
as the text-editing command, and act on the file jkl.txt
in-place.
- Mac (BSD) : Use
s/hello/bye/g
is the backup file extension (!), use jkl.txt
as the text-editing command, but uh-oh!: the command code given there is j
(not, eg s
, a valid command code for substitution), so error with invalid command code j
.
Portable solution
To get a portable command, you can use this invocation, that works across both GNU sed
and Mac (BSD) sed
in Mac OS X Mavericks (v10.9, released June 2013) and above:
sed -i'' -e 's/hello/bye/g' jkl.txt
Placing the extension immediately after the -i
(eg -i''
or -i'.bak'
, without a space) is what GNU sed
expects, and is now accepted by Mac (BSD) sed
too, though it wasn't tolerated by earlier versions (eg with Mac OS X v10.6, a space was required after -i
, eg -i '.bak'
).
The -e
parameter allows us to be explicit about where we're declaring the edit command.
Until Mac OS was updated in 2013, there wasn't any portable command across GNU and Mac (BSD), as these variants also failed:
sed -i -e ...
- does not work on OS X as it creates -e
backups
sed -i '' -e ...
- fails on GNU
When there wasn't a sed
command working on all platforms, you could have tried using another command to achieve the same result, e.g. perl -i -pe's/old_link/new_link/g' *
.
sed
sees a "c" in your data as a command. Are you using a variable? Please post something that more closely represents the actual command and some data that you're processing. You can get a simple demonstration of this error by doingecho x | sed c
.