I have very long log files, is it possible to ask grep to only search the first 10 lines?
11 Answers
The magic of pipes;
head -10 log.txt | grep <whatever>
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18you can also pipe an arbitrary stream to
head
:someCmd | head -10
May 30, 2015 at 8:19 -
1Head defaults to printing the first 10 lines to standard output, so this is valid for 10 lines
head log.txt | grep <whatever>
– ZleminiSep 30, 2016 at 12:38 -
6Is there a way to do this when using grep's
-l
option? I'd like to list all the files who's first 5 characters areRIFFD
. May 23, 2017 at 19:20
For folks who find this on Google, I needed to search the first n
lines of multiple files, but to only print the matching filenames. I used
gawk 'FNR>10 {nextfile} /pattern/ { print FILENAME ; nextfile }' filenames
The FNR..nextfile
stops processing a file once 10 lines have been seen. The //..{}
prints the filename and moves on whenever the first match in a given file shows up. To quote the filenames for the benefit of other programs, use
gawk 'FNR>10 {nextfile} /pattern/ { print "\"" FILENAME "\"" ; nextfile }' filenames
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13
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1for me, this code printed out the full path of the file. Which is exactly what I needed. Also
FNR=1
will just search 1st line. Thanks!– Brian WOct 12, 2017 at 5:25 -
7To do this recursively over a directory:
find ./path -type -f -exec awk 'FNR>10 {nextfile} /pattern/ { print FILENAME ; nextfile }' '{}' +
May 7, 2019 at 17:17 -
2
-
Or use awk
for a single process without |
:
awk '/your_regexp/ && NR < 11' INPUTFILE
On each line, if your_regexp
matches, and the number of records (lines) is less than 11, it executes the default action (which is printing the input line).
Or use sed
:
sed -n '/your_regexp/p;10q' INPUTFILE
Checks your regexp and prints the line (-n
means don't print the input, which is otherwise the default), and quits right after the 10th line.
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1
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awk '{ if ( NR <= 10 ) { if(index($0,"ab") > 0) { print $0; } } else { exit; } }' textfile
-- faster.– user982733Jan 7, 2012 at 3:07 -
1@potong you are right, corrected. @srikanthradix while it can be faster you're solution is not searching for regexps but only for fixed strings.
awk '{ if ( NR <= 10 ) { if( $0 ~ "YOUR_REGEXP") { print } } else { exit; } }' textfile
does. Jan 7, 2012 at 10:06 -
4Plus the style isn't
awkish
.2xifs
and1xelse
in a command that needs no action statement would make aho. weinberger and kernighan cry ... Jan 7, 2012 at 12:46 -
1I think, instead of NR it would be better to use FNR, because if you use awk with multiple files FNR starts from 0 for each file. Oct 4, 2016 at 9:09
You have a few options using programs along with grep
. The simplest in my opinion is to use head
:
head -n10 filename | grep ...
head
will output the first 10 lines (using the -n
option), and then you can pipe that output to grep
.
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7I didn't even realize, all the solutions here using
head
have used-n 10
(including me) not realizing thathead
by default displays only 10 lines. :) Jan 7, 2012 at 1:05
head -10 log.txt | grep -A 2 -B 2 pattern_to_search
-A 2
: print two lines before the pattern.
-B 2
: print two lines after the pattern.
head -10 log.txt # read the first 10 lines of the file.
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1
The output of head -10 file
can be piped to grep
in order to accomplish this:
head -10 file | grep …
Using Perl:
perl -ne 'last if $. > 10; print if /pattern/' file
An extension to Joachim Isaksson's answer: Quite often I need something from the middle of a long file, e.g. lines 5001 to 5020, in which case you can combine head
with tail
:
head -5020 file.txt | tail -20 | grep x
This gets the first 5020 lines, then shows only the last 20 of those, then pipes everything to grep.
(Edited: fencepost error in my example numbers, added pipe to grep)
grep -A 10 <Pattern>
This is to grab the pattern and the next 10 lines after the pattern. This would work well only for a known pattern, if you don't have a known pattern use the "head" suggestions.
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1Although it might right. add more description of question to make answer more comprehensive. Sep 18, 2014 at 8:37
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5This answers a completely different question and is not useful in this context.– Pre101Oct 18, 2018 at 3:43
grep -m6 "string" cov.txt
This searches only the first 6 lines for string
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12No, this will give you the first 6 occurrences of "string" in the whole cov.txt file Oct 31, 2019 at 10:55