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I run sed to do some substitution on windows and I noticed that it automatically converts line endings to Unix (\n). Is there an option to tell sed to use Windows line endings (\r\n) or even better to preserve the line endings from the file?

Note: I use sed from unxutils: http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/

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    The solutions below do not work on macOS. Commented Mar 17, 2017 at 20:53
  • I even got this far and it still didn't work LC_ALL=C perl -i -e 'binmode $STDIN;undef $/;$_=<>;s|http://911coned.com|https://911coned.com|gm;print' education.html Commented Mar 17, 2017 at 21:01
  • So actually the command above does work and I just discovered a bug in the git diff program. Commented Mar 17, 2017 at 21:13
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    You can use sed (without any special options) + unix2dos
    – mems
    Commented Oct 31, 2019 at 14:14

5 Answers 5

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You can use the -b option for sed to have it treat the file as binary. This will fix the problem with cygwin's sed on Windows.

Example: sed -b 's/foo/bar/'

If you wish to match the end of the line, remember to match, capture and copy the optional carriage return.

Example: sed -b 's/foo\(\r\?\)$/bar\1/'

From the sed man page:

-b      --binary

This option is available on every platform, but is only effective where the operating system makes a distinction between text files and binary files. When such a distinction is made—as is the case for MS-DOS, Windows, Cygwin—text files are composed of lines separated by a carriage return and a line feed character, and sed does not see the ending CR. When this option is specified, sed will open input files in binary mode, thus not requesting this special processing and considering lines to end at a line feed.`

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    Note that this does not work with sed -i on cygwin (for me), but you can work around that. Thanks for the update -- the other answers were the last word on this subject for a while.
    – harpo
    Commented Nov 19, 2012 at 22:57
  • Note, this option is not available with sed on Mac. Commented Dec 26, 2013 at 20:58
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    Works for me even with sed -i: it is just important how to type it. While sed -bi and sed -i -b work, sed -ib does not work: see the man page for why (uses the b as the suffix for the backup copy). Commented May 4, 2015 at 13:34
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    Use: sed -bi 's/foo/bar/'
    – Kunal B.
    Commented Sep 14, 2015 at 11:55
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    Does not work for me in Windows cygwin. On the lines that sed made the change, the line endings is Unixy. The rest of lines have Windowish line-endings. Thus my file got a mixed of lines with different line endings.
    – daparic
    Commented Mar 24, 2017 at 23:21
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You could try to sub the \n for \r\n at the end of your existing script like so:

sed 's/foo/bar/;s/$/\r/'

or perhaps

 sed -e 's/foo/bar/' -e 's/$/\r/'

If neither of the above two work, you'll have to consult the specific man page for your version of sed to see if such an option exists. Note that the *nix versions of sed do not alter the line terminators without being told to do so.

Another alternative is to use the cygwin version of sed which shouldn't have this undesirable behavior.

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    The cygwin version does have this undesirable behavior.
    – harpo
    Commented Feb 9, 2011 at 6:20
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    If file contains both \n (0x0A) and \r\n (0x0D 0x0A) - this proposed solution (of always re-injecting the \r) breaks it.
    – Vlad
    Commented Sep 18, 2015 at 13:23
  • This works for me using MSYS2/MinGW. Thank you @SiegeX. Commented Feb 5, 2019 at 0:35
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Alternatively, (the cygwin version of) perl -pe doesn't seem to have this problem.

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  • sed on MacOS does not have the -b option and has similar issues as described in the original question. The perl alternative doesn't have this issue, so thanks for your suggestion. sed -i -e 's/<img[^>]*\/>//g' *.xml replaces line endings by '\n' perl -i -p -e 's/<img[^>]*\/>//g' *.xml preserves the original line endings Commented Apr 8, 2017 at 11:02
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Gnuwin can be suppressed to mess up the newlines (win->unix) if you only specify the -b switch and redirect. Using the -i (inline) switch will mess it up.

E.g. sed.exe -b "s/\xFF\xFE//" c:\temp\in.csv > c:\temp\out.csv

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    See a version with working -i mode in my answer.
    – Vadzim
    Commented Dec 15, 2017 at 14:38
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I've found that sed-4.4.exe from https://github.com/mbuilov/sed-windows is pure win as it

  • uses windows CRLF line endings in default mode
  • preserves original line endings in -b mode
  • works correctly with in-place -i mode
  • also offers -z mode with \0 delimeters instead of \n which may be handy sometimes too

See also list of sed options and list of all windows sed ports.

Note that gnuwin32 sed 4.2.1 does corrupt line endings in -bi mode and doesn't have -z mode at all.

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