448

How can I programmatically (not using vi) convert DOS/Windows newlines to Unix newlines?

The dos2unix and unix2dos commands are not available on certain systems.
How can I emulate them with commands such as sed, awk, and tr?

4
  • 17
    In general, just install dos2unix using your package manager, it really is much simpler and does exist on most platforms.
    – Brad Koch
    Oct 20, 2015 at 20:15
  • 1
    Agreed! @BradKoch Simple as 'brew install dos2unix' on Mac OSX
    – SmileIT
    Apr 3, 2018 at 13:57
  • 2
    Not all users have root access, and thus cannot install packages. Maybe that's why the user asked the very specific question he asked.
    – bsd
    Jan 30, 2022 at 10:24

23 Answers 23

425

You can use tr to convert from DOS to Unix; however, you can only do this safely if CR appears in your file only as the first byte of a CRLF byte pair. This is usually the case. You then use:

tr -d '\015' <DOS-file >UNIX-file

Note that the name DOS-file is different from the name UNIX-file; if you try to use the same name twice, you will end up with no data in the file.

You can't do it the other way round (with standard 'tr').

If you know how to enter carriage return into a script (control-V, control-M to enter control-M), then:

sed 's/^M$//'     # DOS to Unix
sed 's/$/^M/'     # Unix to DOS

where the '^M' is the control-M character. You can also use the bash ANSI-C Quoting mechanism to specify the carriage return:

sed $'s/\r$//'     # DOS to Unix
sed $'s/$/\r/'     # Unix to DOS

However, if you're going to have to do this very often (more than once, roughly speaking), it is far more sensible to install the conversion programs (e.g. dos2unix and unix2dos, or perhaps dtou and utod) and use them.

If you need to process entire directories and subdirectories, you can use zip:

zip -r -ll zipfile.zip somedir/
unzip zipfile.zip

This will create a zip archive with line endings changed from CRLF to CR. unzip will then put the converted files back in place (and ask you file by file - you can answer: Yes-to-all). Credits to @vmsnomad for pointing this out.

13
  • 21
    using tr -d '\015' <DOS-file >UNIX-file where DOS-file == UNIX-file just results in an empty file. The output file has to be a different file, unfortunately. Nov 15, 2013 at 1:50
  • 3
    @ButtleButkus: Well, yes; that's why I used two different names. If you zap the input file before the program reads it all, as you do when you use the same name twice, you end up with an empty file. That is uniform behaviour on Unix-like systems. It requires special code to handle overwriting an input file safely. Follow the instructions and you will be OK. Nov 15, 2013 at 1:56
  • 4
    There are places; you have to know where to find them. Within limits, the GNU sed option -i (for in-place) works; the limits are linked files and symlinks. The sort command has 'always' (since 1979, if not earlier) supported the -o option which can list one of the input files. However, that is in part because sort must read all its input before it can write any of its output. Other programs sporadically support overwriting one of their input files. You can find a general purpose program (script) to avoid problems in 'The UNIX Programming Environment' by Kernighan & Pike. Nov 15, 2013 at 2:14
  • 4
    The third option worked for me, thanks. I did use the -i option: sed -i $'s/\r$//' filename - to edit in place. I am working on a machine that does not have access to the internet, so software installation is a problem.
    – Warren Dew
    Nov 24, 2014 at 17:40
  • 3
    @JonathanLeffler The general-purpose program is called sponge and can be found in moreutils: tr -d '\015' < original_file | sponge original_file. I use it daily.
    – eush77
    Mar 24, 2017 at 15:56
100

You can use Vim programmatically with the option -c {command}:

DOS to Unix:

vim file.txt -c "set ff=unix" -c ":wq"

Unix to DOS:

vim file.txt -c "set ff=dos" -c ":wq"

"set ff=unix/dos" means change fileformat (ff) of the file to Unix/DOS end of line format.

":wq" means write the file to disk and quit the editor (allowing to use the command in a loop).

1
  • 9
    you can use ":x" instead of ":wq" Jul 5, 2019 at 11:19
86

Use:

tr -d "\r" < file

Take a look here for examples using sed:

# In a Unix environment: convert DOS newlines (CR/LF) to Unix format.
sed 's/.$//'               # Assumes that all lines end with CR/LF
sed 's/^M$//'              # In Bash/tcsh, press Ctrl-V then Ctrl-M
sed 's/\x0D$//'            # Works on ssed, gsed 3.02.80 or higher

# In a Unix environment: convert Unix newlines (LF) to DOS format.
sed "s/$/`echo -e \\\r`/"            # Command line under ksh
sed 's/$'"/`echo \\\r`/"             # Command line under bash
sed "s/$/`echo \\\r`/"               # Command line under zsh
sed 's/$/\r/'                        # gsed 3.02.80 or higher

Use sed -i for in-place conversion, e.g., sed -i 's/..../' file.

4
  • 11
    I used a variant since my file only had \r : tr "\r" "\n" < infile > outfile
    – Matt Todd
    Nov 19, 2010 at 0:29
  • 1
    @MattTodd could you post this as an answer? the -d is featured more frequently and will not help in the "only \r" situation.
    – n611x007
    Oct 14, 2013 at 15:20
  • 5
    Note that the proposed \r to \n mapping has the effect of double-spacing the files; each single CRLF line ending in DOS becomes \n\n in Unix. Apr 30, 2014 at 13:58
  • Can I do this recursively? Jan 27, 2019 at 3:45
59

Install dos2unix, then convert a file in-place with

dos2unix <filename>

To output converted text to a different file use

dos2unix -n <input-file> <output-file>

You can install it on Ubuntu or Debian with

sudo apt install dos2unix

or on macOS using Homebrew

brew install dos2unix
1
  • 4
    I know the question asks for alternatives to dos2unix but it's the first google result.
    – user3064538
    Jun 23, 2019 at 1:31
34

Using AWK you can do:

awk '{ sub("\r$", ""); print }' dos.txt > unix.txt

Using Perl you can do:

perl -pe 's/\r$//' < dos.txt > unix.txt
1
  • 2
    A nice, portable awk solution.
    – mklement0
    Feb 28, 2015 at 5:29
19

This problem can be solved with standard tools, but there are sufficiently many traps for the unwary that I recommend you install the flip command, which was written over 20 years ago by Rahul Dhesi, the author of zoo. It does an excellent job converting file formats while, for example, avoiding the inadvertant destruction of binary files, which is a little too easy if you just race around altering every CRLF you see...

4
  • Any way to do this in a streaming fashion, without modifying the original file?
    – augurar
    Dec 7, 2013 at 22:08
  • @augurar you may check "similar packages" packages.debian.org/wheezy/flip
    – n611x007
    Aug 19, 2014 at 11:12
  • I had an experience of breaking half of my OS just by running texxto with a wrong flag. Be careful especially if you want to do it on entire folders.
    – A_P
    Sep 13, 2018 at 13:21
  • The link seems to be broken (times out - "504 Gateway Time-out"). Apr 8, 2021 at 11:21
16

If you don't have access to dos2unix, but can read this page, then you can copy/paste dos2unix.py from here.

#!/usr/bin/env python
"""\
convert dos linefeeds (crlf) to unix (lf)
usage: dos2unix.py <input> <output>
"""
import sys

if len(sys.argv[1:]) != 2:
  sys.exit(__doc__)

content = ''
outsize = 0
with open(sys.argv[1], 'rb') as infile:
  content = infile.read()
with open(sys.argv[2], 'wb') as output:
  for line in content.splitlines():
    outsize += len(line) + 1
    output.write(line + '\n')

print("Done. Saved %s bytes." % (len(content)-outsize))

(Cross-posted from Super User.)

2
  • 2
    The usage is misleading. The real dos2unix converts all input files by default. Your usage implies -n parameter. And the real dos2unix is a filter that reads from stdin, writes to stdout if the files are not given.
    – jfs
    Jul 6, 2015 at 11:32
  • Also, this won't work on some platforms since there is no python -- they apparently can't be bothered with backward compatibility, so it is python2 or python3 or ...
    – user9645
    Sep 1, 2021 at 11:13
15

The solutions posted so far only deal with part of the problem, converting DOS/Windows' CRLF into Unix's LF; the part they're missing is that DOS use CRLF as a line separator, while Unix uses LF as a line terminator. The difference is that a DOS file (usually) won't have anything after the last line in the file, while Unix will. To do the conversion properly, you need to add that final LF (unless the file is zero-length, i.e. has no lines in it at all). My favorite incantation for this (with a little added logic to handle Mac-style CR-separated files, and not molest files that're already in unix format) is a bit of perl:

perl -pe 'if ( s/\r\n?/\n/g ) { $f=1 }; if ( $f || ! $m ) { s/([^\n])\z/$1\n/ }; $m=1' PCfile.txt

Note that this sends the Unixified version of the file to stdout. If you want to replace the file with a Unixified version, add perl's -i flag.

2
  • @LudovicZenohateLagouardette Was it a plain text file (i.e. csv or tab-demited text), or something else? If it was in some database-ish format, manipulating it as if it was text is very likely to corrupt its internal structure. Jan 23, 2016 at 20:53
  • A plain text csv, but I think the enconding was strange. I think it messed up because of that. However don't worry. I am always collecting backups an this wasn't even the real dataset, just a 1gb one. The real is a 26gb. Jan 24, 2016 at 8:02
10

It is super duper easy with PCRE;

As a script, or replace $@ with your files.

#!/usr/bin/env bash
perl -pi -e 's/\r\n/\n/g' -- $@

This will overwrite your files in place!

I recommend only doing this with a backup (version control or otherwise)

2
  • Thank you! This works, although I'm writing the filename and no --. I chose this solution because it's easy to understand and adapt for me. FYI, this is what the switches do: -p assume a "while input" loop, -i edit input file in place, -e execute following command
    – Rolf
    Oct 11, 2017 at 12:21
  • Strictly speaking, PCRE is a reimplementation of Perl's regex engine, not the regex engine from Perl. They both have this capability, though there are also differences, in spite of the impication in the name.
    – tripleee
    Oct 27, 2017 at 8:24
6

I had just to ponder that same question (on Windows-side, but equally applicable to Linux).

Surprisingly, nobody mentioned a very much automated way of doing CRLF <-> LF conversion for text-files using the good old zip -ll option (Info-ZIP):

zip -ll textfiles-lf.zip files-with-crlf-eol.*
unzip textfiles-lf.zip

NOTE: this would create a ZIP file preserving the original file names, but converting the line endings to LF. Then unzip would extract the files as zip'ed, that is, with their original names (but with LF-endings), thus prompting to overwrite the local original files if any.

The relevant excerpt from the zip --help:

zip --help
...
-l   convert LF to CR LF (-ll CR LF to LF)
2
  • 1
    Best answer, according to me, as it can process entire directories and sub-directories. I'm glad I digged that far down.
    – caram
    Mar 9, 2020 at 13:24
  • This works really good! But one thing that can be good to remember is that zip preserves timestamps as default. Sometimes that's good, but if you want new timestamps use -DD for folders and files, -D is only folders. On VMS it's sets timestamps for folders by default, and -D is folders and files.
    – 244an
    Oct 20, 2023 at 10:11
6

Interestingly, in my Git Bash on Windows, sed "" did the trick already:

$ echo -e "abc\r" >tst.txt
$ file tst.txt
tst.txt: ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators
$ sed -i "" tst.txt
$ file tst.txt
tst.txt: ASCII text

My guess is that sed ignores them when reading lines from the input and always writes Unix line endings to the output.

1
  • 2
    On a LF type system like GNU/Linux, sed "" will not do the trick, though.
    – ndim
    May 27, 2021 at 3:53
5

An even simpler AWK solution without a program:

awk -v ORS='\r\n' '1' unix.txt > dos.txt

Technically '1' is your program, because AWK requires one when the given option.

Alternatively, an internal solution is:

while IFS= read -r line;
do printf '%s\n' "${line%$'\r'}";
done < dos.txt > unix.txt
6
  • That's handy, but just to be clear: this translates Unix -> Windows/DOS, which is the opposite direction of what the OP asked for.
    – mklement0
    Feb 28, 2015 at 6:01
  • 5
    It was done on purpose, left as an exercise for the author. eyerolls awk -v RS='\r\n' '1' dos.txt > unix.txt
    – nawK
    Mar 1, 2015 at 4:14
  • Great (and kudos to you for pedagogic finesse).
    – mklement0
    Mar 1, 2015 at 4:35
  • 1
    "b/c awk requires one when given option." - awk always requires a program, whether options are specified or not.
    – mklement0
    Mar 1, 2015 at 4:37
  • 2
    The pure bash solution is interesting, but much slower than an equivalent awk or sed solution. Also, you must use while IFS= read -r line to faithfully preserve the input lines, otherwise leading and trailing whitespace is trimmed (alternatively, use no variable name in the read command and work with $REPLY).
    – mklement0
    Mar 1, 2015 at 6:14
4

For Mac OS X if you have Homebrew installed (http://brew.sh/):

brew install dos2unix

for csv in *.csv; do dos2unix -c mac ${csv}; done;

Make sure you have made copies of the files, as this command will modify the files in place. The -c mac option makes the switch to be compatible with OS X.

2
  • 1
    This answer really doesn't the original poster's question.
    – hlin117
    Feb 7, 2015 at 17:43
  • 3
    OS X users should not use -c mac, which is for converting pre-OS X CR-only newlines. You want to use that mode only for files to and from Mac OS 9 or before.
    – askewchan
    Apr 14, 2016 at 13:20
4
sed -i.bak --expression='s/\r\n/\n/g' <file_path>

Since the question mentions sed, this is the most straightforward way to use sed to achieve this. The expression says replace all carriage-returns and line-feeds with just line-feeds only. That is what you need when you go from Windows to Unix. I verified it works.

5
  • Hey John Paul--this answer got flagged for deletion so came up in a review queue for me. In general, when you've got a question like this that's 8 years old, with 22 answers, you'll want to explain how your answer is useful in a way that other existing answers are not.
    – zzxyz
    Oct 18, 2018 at 22:34
  • I could not get this to work when adding --in-place mydosfile.txt to the end (or piping to a file). The end result was the file still had CRLF. I was testing on a Graviton (AArch64) EC2 instance. Oct 21, 2021 at 20:17
  • @NeilC.Obremski I updated with full command line, please try that. It will also make a backup before change.
    – John Paul
    Oct 22, 2021 at 21:52
  • 1
    sed 's/\r\n/\n/g' does not match anything. Refer to can-sed-replace-new-line-characters
    – zhenguoli
    Jan 5, 2022 at 6:52
  • It worked for me.
    – John Paul
    Jan 6, 2022 at 7:34
4

Just complementing @Jonathan Leffler's excellent answer, if you have a file with mixed line endings (LF and CRLF) and you need to normalize to CRLF (DOS), use the following commands in sequence...

# DOS to Unix
sed -i $'s/\r$//' "<YOUR_FILE>"

# Unix to DOS (normalized)
sed -i $'s/$/\r/' "<YOUR_FILE>"

NOTE: If you have a file with mixed line endings (LF and CRLF), the second command above alone will cause a mess.

If you need to convert to LF (Unix) the first command alone will be enough...

# DOS to Unix
sed -i $'s/\r$//' "<YOUR_FILE>"

Thanks! 🤗

[Ref(s).: https://stackoverflow.com/a/3777853/3223785 ]

3

TIMTOWTDI!

perl -pe 's/\r\n/\n/; s/([^\n])\z/$1\n/ if eof' PCfile.txt

Based on Gordon Davisson's answer.

One must consider the possibility of [noeol]...

3

You can use AWK. Set the record separator (RS) to a regular expression that matches all possible newline character, or characters. And set the output record separator (ORS) to the Unix-style newline character.

awk 'BEGIN{RS="\r|\n|\r\n|\n\r";ORS="\n"}{print}' windows_or_macos.txt > unix.txt
2
  • That's the one that worked for me (MacOS, git diff shows ^M, edited in vim)
    – Dorian
    Mar 1, 2017 at 9:17
  • Your command put an extra blank line in between every line when converting a DOS file. Doing this awk 'BEGIN{RS="\r\n";ORS=""}{print}' dosfile > unixfile fixed that issue, but it still does not fix the missing EOL on the last line.
    – user9645
    Sep 1, 2021 at 11:04
2

This worked for me

tr "\r" "\n" < sampledata.csv > sampledata2.csv 
1
  • 11
    This will convert every single DOS-newline into two UNIX-newlines.
    – Melebius
    Aug 4, 2015 at 6:11
2

On Linux, it's easy to convert ^M (Ctrl + M) to *nix newlines (^J) with sed.

It will be something like this on the CLI, and there will actually be a line break in the text. However, the \ passes that ^J along to sed:

sed 's/^M/\
/g' < ffmpeg.log > new.log

You get this by using ^V (Ctrl + V), ^M (Ctrl + M) and \ (backslash) as you type:

sed 's/^V^M/\^V^J/g' < ffmpeg.log > new.log
0
0

As an extension to Jonathan Leffler's Unix to DOS solution, to safely convert to DOS when you're unsure of the file's current line endings:

sed '/^M$/! s/$/^M/'

This checks that the line does not already end in CRLF before converting to CRLF.

0

I made a script based on the accepted answer, so you can convert it directly without needing an additional file in the end and removing and renaming afterwards.

convert-crlf-to-lf() {
    file="$1"
    tr -d '\015' <"$file" >"$file"2
    rm -rf "$file"
    mv "$file"2 "$file"
}

Just make sure if you have a file like "file1.txt" that "file1.txt2" doesn't already exist or it will be overwritten. I use this as a temporary place to store the file in.

0

With Bash 4.2 and newer you can use something like this to strip the trailing CR, which only uses Bash built-ins:

if [[ "${str: -1}" == $'\r' ]]; then
    str="${str:: -1}"
fi
-3

I tried

sed 's/^M$//' file.txt

on OS X as well as several other methods (Fixing Dos Line Endings or http://hintsforums.macworld.com/archive/index.php/t-125.html). None worked, and the file remained unchanged (by the way, Ctrl + V, Enter was needed to reproduce ^M). In the end I used TextWrangler. It's not strictly command line, but it works and it doesn't complain.

2
  • The hintsforums.macworld.com link is (effectively) broken - it redirects to the main page, "hints.macworld.com" Apr 8, 2021 at 11:28
  • command is missing the -i option
    – david
    Jul 24, 2022 at 12:20

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