Find the first CAPTURE and look back for the last one.
echo "/CAPTURE/,?CAPTURE? p" | ed -s <(gunzip -c inputfile.gz)
EDIT: Answer to comment and second (better?) solution.
When your input doesn't end with a newline, ed
will complain, as shown by these tests.
# With newline
printf "1,$ p\n" | ed -s <(printf "%s\n" test)
# Without newline
printf "1,$ p\n" | ed -s <(printf "%s" test)
# message removed
printf "1,$ p\n" | ed -s <(printf "%s" test) 2> /dev/null
I do not know the memory complications this will give for a large file, but you would prefer a streaming solution.
You can use sed
for the next approach.
Keep reading lines until you find the first match. During this time only remember the last line read (by putting it in a Hold area).
Now change your tactics.
Append each line to the Hold area. You do not know when to flush until the next match.
When you have the next match, recall the Hold area and print this.
I needed some tweeking for preventing the second match to be printed twice. I solved this by reading the next line and replacing the HOLD area with that line.
The total solution is
gunzip -c inputfile.gz | sed -n '1,/CAPTURE/{h;n};H;/CAPTURE/{x;p;n;h};'
When you don't like the sed
holding space, you can implemnt the same approach with awk
:
gunzip -c inputfile.gz |
awk '/CAPTURE/{capt=1} capt==1{a[i++]=$0} /CAPTURE/{for(j=0;j<i;j++) print a[j]; i=0}'