The lines in the file :

-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 2000 -j ACCEPT
-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 2001 -j ACCEPT
-A INPUT -m state --state NEW -m tcp -p tcp --dport 2002 -j ACCEPT

to comment out let's say the line that contains

2001

i can simply run this SED command:

sed -i '/ 2001 /s/^/#/' file

but now how do i revert back ?

as in uncomment that same line ?

i tried

sed -i '/ 2001 /s/^//' file

that does not work.

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4  
sed -i '/ 2001 /s/^#//' file may be? – jaypal singh Jul 22 '14 at 13:55
1  
Why are you using this technique? The standard technique would be to use one line in the script and make the year number into an argument to the script. You could even default to, say, 2001 if no argument is provided (${1:-2001}), or use an environment variable (${DEFAULT_YEAR:-2001}), or both (${1:-${DEFAULT_YEAR:-2001}}). – Jonathan Leffler Jul 22 '14 at 14:07
up vote 30 down vote accepted

Try this sed command,

sed -i '/^#.* 2001 /s/^#//' file
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2  
why . that will remove the first character even if its not a comment ? – user3442743 Jul 22 '14 at 13:58
    
@Jidder op said that it was already commented. – Avinash Raj Jul 22 '14 at 13:59
2  
still needs to be fail proof. this answer needs corrections if it is to be chosen – user3864928 Jul 22 '14 at 14:01
    
You can tighten the line-matching regex to /^#.* 2001 /, but what you've got is strictly within the remit of the question. – Jonathan Leffler Jul 22 '14 at 14:01
1  
works perfect. its fail proof now. thanks. – user3864928 Jul 22 '14 at 14:07

Yes, to comment line containing specific string with sed, simply do:

sed -i '/<pattern>/s/^/#/g' file

And to uncomment it:

sed -i '/<pattern>/s/^#//g' file

In your case:

sed -i '/2001/s/^/#/g' file    (to comment out)
sed -i '/2001/s/^#//g' file    (to uncomment)

Option "g" at the end means global change. If you want to change only a single instance of pattern, just skip this.

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add the -e argument for macOS and BSD – Jonas Drotleff Feb 25 '17 at 10:55
    
To avoid commenting multiple times and taking into account multiple leading #, use the following commands: sed -i '/<pattern>/s/^#*/#/g' file (to comment out) and sed -i '/<pattern>/s/^#*//g' file (to uncomment) – Louis M May 2 '17 at 11:46

To complement @Avinash Raj's helpful answer with a more generic, POSIX-compliant solution.

  • Toggles commenting of lines that match a specifiable string that must occur as a separate word anywhere on the line.
  • The comment character (string) is also specifiable.

Note that the solution is awk-based, because a robust portable solution with sed is virtually impossible due to the limitations of POSIX' basic regular expressions.

awk -v commentId='#' -v word='2001' '
  $0 ~ "(^|[[:punct:][:space:]])" word "($|[[:punct:][:space:]])" { 
    if (match($0, "^[[:space:]]*" commentId))
      $0 = substr($0, RSTART + RLENGTH)
    else
      $0 = commentId $0
  } 
  { print }
  ' file > tmpfile.$$ && mv tmpfile.$$ file
  • (^|[[:punct:][:space:]]) and ($|[[:punct:][:space:]]) are the POSIX extended regex equivalents of the \< and \> word-boundary assertions known from other regex dialects.
  • Whitespace after the comment char is preserved, but not before it.
  • When prepending the comment char to a line, it is directly prepended, without whitespace.
  • Thus, if you only toggle comments with this solution, all whitespace is preserved.
  • POSIX awk doesn't offer in-place updating (neither does POSIX sed, incidentally), hence the output is first captured in a temporary file and that file then replaces the original on success.
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