3

This question is very much the same as this except that I am looking to do this as fast as possible, doing only a single pass of the (unfortunately gzip compressed) file.

Given the pattern CAPTURE and input

1:.........
...........
100:CAPTURE
...........
150:CAPTURE
...........
200:CAPTURE
...........
1000:......

Print:

100:CAPTURE
...........
150:CAPTURE
...........
200:CAPTURE

Can this be accomplished with a regular expression?

I vaguely remember that this kind of grammar cannot be captured by a regular expression but not quite sure as regular expressions these days provide look aheads,etc.

0

7 Answers 7

2

You can buffer the lines until you see a line that contains CAPTURE, treating the first occurrence of the pattern specially.

#!/usr/bin/env perl
use warnings;
use strict;

my $first=1;
my @buf;
while ( my $line = <> ) {
    push @buf, $line unless $first;
    if ( $line=~/CAPTURE/ ) {
        if ($first) {
            @buf = ($line);
            $first = 0;
        }
        print @buf;
        @buf = ();
    }
}

Feed the input into this program via zcat file.gz | perl script.pl.

Which can of course be jammed into a one-liner, if need be...

zcat file.gz | perl -ne '$x&&push@b,$_;if(/CAPTURE/){$x||=@b=$_;print@b;@b=()}'

Can this be accomplished with a regular expression?

You mean in a single pass, in a single regex? If you don't mind reading the entire file into memory, sure... but this is obviously not a good idea for large files.

zcat file.gz | perl -0777ne '/((^.*CAPTURE.*$)(?s:.*)(?2)(?:\z|\n))/m and print $1'
6
  • I saw that you removed the unless clause in the edit, although it doesn't affect the output, wouldn't unnecessarily buffer unused lines?
    – Erric
    Jun 6, 2018 at 21:28
  • @Erric: You're correct - I figured that the code being more simple would help in making it easier to understand, at the expense of some extra buffering. But since you requested "as fast as possible", I've rolled back that edit.
    – haukex
    Jun 6, 2018 at 21:41
  • Could you explain $x||=@b=$_; in the one liner? I am interested in the one liner since I need to run this on a remote server but I am not that familiar with perl shorthands. Also marking this as the answer as I don't see a faster way, and a more elegant one liner :)
    – Erric
    Jun 6, 2018 at 21:47
  • 1
    $x||=@b=$_; is the same as $x = $x || (@b = $_);. The first time this is evaluated, $x is false, so @b = $_ is executed, and also $x is set to the return value of @b = $_, which is 1 (because one element is being assigned to the list). So every following time the statement is executed, $x is true, so @b = $_ is not executed. $x is the inverse of the $first flag in the longer code, otherwise the two scripts do exactly the same thing.
    – haukex
    Jun 6, 2018 at 21:51
  • One word: neat!
    – Erric
    Jun 6, 2018 at 21:52
2

I would write

gunzip -c file.gz | sed -n '/CAPTURE/,$p' | tac | sed -n '/CAPTURE/,$p' | tac
0
2

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}'
9
  • Nice, any idea how it compares with haukex's solution? I am guessing it might take more time and memory since ed has to keep everything buffered till the end and make two passes? Also ed somehow prints "newline appended" before the output
    – Erric
    Jun 6, 2018 at 21:36
  • @Erric When in doubt, benchmark! Here's a start. At least in this benchmark, if you have the memory to spare, reading the whole file into memory like in my second solution blows all of the other solutions out of the water. Otherwise, it appears that both of Walter's solutions are fastest! But make sure to repeat the benchmark with realistic data.
    – haukex
    Jun 6, 2018 at 22:40
  • Cool, but I don't think that glenn's solution would outperform yours in most practical cases where the span of matching lines might be large and placed towards the middle of the file. At the same time, I am really surprised by walter's results: If ed buffered contents into the memory, I'd expect it to match the perl regex performance, but instead it matches the performance of his own streaming sed based solution (which btw I'd really like to know why runs the fastest)
    – Erric
    Jun 6, 2018 at 23:14
  • I added an awk solution, almost as clear as Glenn's solution and I think with about the same performance as the sed. I am surprised by ed's speed too.
    – Walter A
    Jun 7, 2018 at 6:14
  • I am surprised by sed's speed rather than ed since ed (probably) has the liberty of random access within the memory
    – Erric
    Jun 7, 2018 at 10:56
0

I don't think regex will be faster than double scan...

Here is an awk solution (double scan)

$ awk '/pattern/ && NR==FNR {a[++f]=NR; next} a[1]<=FNR && FNR<=a[f]' file{,} 

Alternatively if you have any a priori information on where the patterns appear on the file you can have heuristic approaches which will be faster on those special cases.

2
  • Does this solution require 2 gunzip operations (or a temp file)?
    – Walter A
    Jun 6, 2018 at 20:27
  • better to use a temp file.
    – karakfa
    Jun 6, 2018 at 21:05
0

Here is one more example with regex (the cons is that if files are large, it will consume a large memory)

#!/usr/bin/perl
{
  local $/ = undef;
  open FILE, $ARGV[0] or die "Couldn't open file: $!";
  binmode FILE;
  $string = <FILE>;
  close FILE;
}

print $1 if $string =~ /([^\n]+(CAPTURE).*\2.*?)\n/s;

Or with one liner:

cat file.tmp | perl -ne '$/=undef; print $1 if <STDIN> =~ /([^\n]+(CAPTURE).*\2.*?)\n/s'

result:

100:CAPTURE
...........
150:CAPTURE
...........
200:CAPTURE
0

This might work for you (GNU sed):

sed '/CAPTURE/!d;:a;n;:b;//ba;$d;N;bb' file

Delete all lines until the first containing the required string. Print the line containing the required string. Replace the pattern space with the next line. If this line contains the required string, repeat the last two previous sentences. If it is the last line of the file, delete the pattern space. Otherwise, append the next line and repeat the last three previous sentences.

Having studied the test files used for haukex's benchmark, it would seem that sed is not the tool to extract this file. Using a mixture of csplit, grep and sed presents a reasonably fast solution as follows:

lines=$(grep -nTA1 --no-group-separator CAPTURE oldFile | 
        sed '1s/\t.*//;1h;$!d;s/\t.*//;H;x;s/\n/ /')
csplit -s oldFile $lines && rm xx0{0,2} && mv xx01 newFile

Split the original file into three files. A file preceding the first occurrence of CAPTURE, a file from the first CAPTURE to the last CAPTURE and a file containing of the remainder. The first and third files are discarded and the second file renamed.

csplit can use line numbers to split the original file. grep is extremely fast at filtering patterns and can return the line numbers of all patterns that match CAPTURE and the following context line. sed can manipulate the results of grep into two line numbers which are supplied to the csplit command.

When run against the test files (as above) I get timings around 10 seconds.

2
  • Solution runs too slow in haukex's benchmark (217.11s user 0.33s system 99% cpu 3:37.99 total, and still did not complete)
    – Erric
    Jun 7, 2018 at 5:26
  • @Erric I'd be interested to see the source file so I could tailor another solution.
    – potong
    Jun 7, 2018 at 10:41
0

While posting this question, the problem I had at hand was that I had several huge gzip compressed log files generated by a java application. The log lines were of the following format:

[Timestamp] (AppName) {EventId} [INFO]: Log text...
[Timestamp] (AppName) {EventId} [EXCEPTION]: Log text...
                    at com.application.class(Class.java:154)
                    caused by......
[Timestamp] (AppName) {EventId} [LogLevel]: Log text...

Given an EventId, I needed to extract all the lines corresponding to the event from these files. The problem became unsolvable with a trivial grep for EventId just due to the fact that the exception lines could be of arbitrary length and do not contain the EventId.

Unfortunately I forgot to consider the edge case where the last log line for an EventId could be the exception and the answers posted here would not print the stacktrace lines. However it wasn't hard to modify haukex's solution to cover these cases as well:

#!/usr/bin/env perl
use warnings;
use strict;

my $first=1;
my @buf;
while ( my $line = <> ) {
    push @buf, $line unless $first;
    if ( $line=~/EventId/ or ($first==0 and $line!~/\(AppName\)/)) {
        if ($first) {
            @buf = ($line);
            $first = 0;
        }
        print @buf;
        @buf = ();
    }
    else {
        $first = 1;
    }
}

I am still wondering if the faster solutions(mainly walter's sed solution or haukex's in-memory perl solution) could be modified to do the same.

10
  • Do you only want the stacktraces of your EventId (select EventId and all floowing fields that start with whitespace) ?
    – Walter A
    Jun 9, 2018 at 22:14
  • Certainly, at least if I understood your specs: perl -0777ne 'print $& while /^\[.*EventId.*(?:\n|\z)(?:^\s.*(?:\n|\z))*/mg' - I've assumed that lines with EventId start with [ while the following stack trace lines start with whitespace (regex101). Not tested for speed. Note this is different enough from the original question that you might want to open a new question.
    – haukex
    Jun 10, 2018 at 9:26
  • @Walter, No I need all lines corresponding to the EventId, not just stacktrace, stacktraces need to be included too if they are part of the same event.
    – Erric
    Jun 10, 2018 at 10:46
  • @haukex, close enough. Although (AppName) is the only indicator that a next log line has started. Arbitrary lines in between (stacktrace is just one example) may or may not start with whitespace, but I get the idea now and can cook up the regex. @walter Any idea if the sed solution can do the same?
    – Erric
    Jun 10, 2018 at 10:49
  • Really, not even [Timestamp] is a safe indicator? And a stack trace line will never contain (AppName) or EventId? Well, you can get fancy with lookaheads: /^.*EventId.*(?:\n|\z)(?:^(?!.*AppName).*(?:\n|\z))*/gm (regex101) - again, I think perhaps a new question with some representative sample input might be best.
    – haukex
    Jun 10, 2018 at 11:07

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