sed
does it quite quickly:
$ sed 's/-[^-]*$//' file
Kernel release..............2.6.18-194.26.1.el5
Master disk release.........swp-RedHat-Linux-OS-5.5.0.0
This finds the last -
followed by any number of non -
characters up to the end of the line. Then, it replaces them with the empty string, so that they are removed.
Although an idiomatic awk
solution is also nice:
$ awk -F- 'NF--' file
Kernel release..............2.6.18 194.26.1.el5
Master disk release.........swp RedHat Linux OS 5.5.0.0
This sets the field separator to -
and decrements the number of fields in 1
. This works just if you have one -
. Otherwise, the lines format would work (-
would convert into space. For this, you would need to say awk -F- -v OFS=- 'NF--' file
.
And you can also play with rev
and cut
:
$ rev file | cut -d- -f2- | rev
Kernel release..............2.6.18-194.26.1.el5
Master disk release.........swp-RedHat-Linux-OS-5.5.0.0
rev
reverses the line, so that then we can get from the 2nd -
on. Finally, we reverse back to get the initial format.
Through python3
:
$ python3 -c 'import fileinput
with fileinput.input() as f:
for line in f:
print("-".join(line.split("-")[:-1]))' file
Kernel release..............2.6.18-194.26.1.el5
Master disk release.........swp-RedHat-Linux-OS-5.5.0.0
fileinput.input()
gets the input from standard input. for line in f:
iterates over each line and then it splits the line according to -
and then joins the splitted items with -
as a delimiter by excluding the last splitted item. Credits to Avinash Raj!
sed 's/\(.*\)-.*/\1/'
derived from @jimmiji's post.