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SED(P)			   POSIX Programmer's Manual			SED(P)

NAME
       sed - stream editor

SYNOPSIS
       sed [-n] script[file...]

       sed [-n][-e script]...[-f script_file]...[file...]

DESCRIPTION
       The  sed	 utility  is  a stream editor that shall read one or more text
       files, make editing changes according to a script of editing  commands,
       and  write the results to standard output. The script shall be obtained
       from either the script operand string or a combination of  the  option-
       arguments from the -e script and -f script_file options.

OPTIONS
       The  sed	 utility  shall	 conform  to  the  Base	 Definitions volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax  Guidelines,	except
       that the order of presentation of the -e and -f options is significant.

       The following options shall be supported:

       -e  script
	      Add the editing commands specified by the script option-argument
	      to the end of the script of editing commands. The script option-
	      argument	shall  have the same properties as the script operand,
	      described in the OPERANDS section.

       -f  script_file
	      Add the editing commands in the file script_file to the  end  of
	      the script.

       -n     Suppress	the  default  output  (in which each line, after it is
	      examined for editing, is written to standard output). Only lines
	      explicitly selected for output are written.

       Multiple	 -e  and  -f  options  may be specified. All commands shall be
       added to the script in the order specified, regardless of their origin.

OPERANDS
       The following operands shall be supported:

       file   A pathname of a file whose contents are read and edited. If mul‐
	      tiple file operands are specified, the named files shall be read
	      in the order specified and the concatenation  shall  be  edited.
	      If  no  file operands are specified, the standard input shall be
	      used.

       script A string to be used as  the  script  of  editing	commands.  The
	      application  shall  not  present	a  script  that	 violates  the
	      restrictions of a text file except that the final character need
	      not be a <newline>.

STDIN
       The  standard  input  shall be used only if no file operands are speci‐
       fied. See the INPUT FILES section.

INPUT FILES
       The input files shall be text files. The script_files named by  the  -f
       option shall consist of editing commands.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables shall affect the execution of sed:

       LANG   Provide  a  default value for the internationalization variables
	      that are unset or null. (See  the	 Base  Definitions  volume  of
	      IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,  Section  8.2,  Internationalization Vari‐
	      ables for the precedence of internationalization variables  used
	      to determine the values of locale categories.)

       LC_ALL If  set  to a non-empty string value, override the values of all
	      the other internationalization variables.

       LC_COLLATE

	      Determine the locale for the  behavior  of  ranges,  equivalence
	      classes,	and  multi-character collating elements within regular
	      expressions.

       LC_CTYPE
	      Determine the locale for	the  interpretation  of	 sequences  of
	      bytes  of	 text  data as characters (for example, single-byte as
	      opposed to multi-byte characters in arguments and input  files),
	      and  the	behavior  of  character classes within regular expres‐
	      sions.

       LC_MESSAGES
	      Determine the locale that should be used to  affect  the	format
	      and contents of diagnostic messages written to standard error.

       NLSPATH
	      Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of
	      LC_MESSAGES .

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       Default.

STDOUT
       The input files shall be written to standard output, with  the  editing
       commands	 specified  in	the script applied. If the -n option is speci‐
       fied, only those input lines selected by the script shall be written to
       standard output.

STDERR
       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.

OUTPUT FILES
       The output files shall be text files whose formats are dependent on the
       editing commands given.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
       The script shall consist of editing commands of the following form:

	      [address[,address]]function

       where function represents a single-character command verb from the list
       in Editing Commands in sed , followed by any applicable arguments.

       The command can be preceded by <blank>s and/or semicolons. The function
       can be preceded by <blank>s. These optional characters  shall  have  no
       effect.

       In default operation, sed cyclically shall append a line of input, less
       its terminating <newline>, into the pattern space. Normally the pattern
       space  will be empty, unless a D command terminated the last cycle. The
       sed utility shall then apply in sequence all commands  whose  addresses
       select  that  pattern space, and at the end of the script copy the pat‐
       tern space to standard output (except when -n is specified) and	delete
       the  pattern  space.  Whenever the pattern space is written to standard
       output or a named file, sed shall immediately follow it	with  a	 <new‐
       line>.

       Some  of	 the  editing commands use a hold space to save all or part of
       the pattern space for subsequent retrieval. The pattern and hold spaces
       shall each be able to hold at least 8192 bytes.

   Addresses in sed
       An  address  is either a decimal number that counts input lines cumula‐
       tively across files, a '$' character that addresses the	last  line  of
       input,  or  a context address (which consists of a BRE, as described in
       Regular Expressions in sed , preceded and followed by a delimiter, usu‐
       ally a slash).

       An editing command with no addresses shall select every pattern space.

       An  editing  command  with  one address shall select each pattern space
       that matches the address.

       An editing command with two addresses shall select the inclusive	 range
       from the first pattern space that matches the first address through the
       next pattern space that matches the second. (If the second address is a
       number  less  than or equal to the line number first selected, only one
       line shall be selected.) Starting  at  the  first  line	following  the
       selected range, sed shall look again for the first address. Thereafter,
       the process shall be repeated. Omitting either or both of  the  address
       components in the following form produces undefined results:

	      [address[,address]]

   Regular Expressions in sed
       The  sed	 utility  shall support the BREs described in the Base Defini‐
       tions  volume  of  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,	 Section  9.3,	Basic  Regular
       Expressions, with the following additions:

	* In  a	 context  address,  the construction "\cBREc" , where c is any
	  character other than backslash or <newline>, shall be	 identical  to
	  "/BRE/" . If the character designated by c appears following a back‐
	  slash, then it shall be considered to	 be  that  literal  character,
	  which	 shall	not  terminate	the  BRE.  For example, in the context
	  address "\xabc\xdefx" , the second x stands for itself, so that  the
	  BRE is "abcxdef" .

	* The  escape  sequence	 '\n'  shall match a <newline> embedded in the
	  pattern space. A literal <newline> shall not be used in the BRE of a
	  context address or in the substitute function.

	* If  an  RE  is  empty	 (that	is, no pattern is specified) sed shall
	  behave as if the last RE used in the last command applied (either as
	  an address or as part of a substitute command) was specified.

   Editing Commands in sed
       In  the	following list of editing commands, the maximum number of per‐
       missible addresses for each  function  is  indicated  by	 [  0addr],  [
       1addr], or [ 2addr], representing zero, one, or two addresses.

       The  argument  text  shall  consist of one or more lines. Each embedded
       <newline> in the text shall be preceded by  a  backslash.  Other	 back‐
       slashes	in text shall be removed, and the following character shall be
       treated literally.

       The r and w command verbs, and the w flag to the	 s  command,  take  an
       optional	 rfile	(or  wfile) parameter, separated from the command verb
       letter or flag by one or more <blank>s; implementations may allow  zero
       separation as an extension.

       The  argument  rfile  or the argument wfile shall terminate the editing
       command. Each wfile shall be created before processing  begins.	Imple‐
       mentations  shall  support  at least ten wfile arguments in the script;
       the actual number (greater than or equal to 10) that  is	 supported  by
       the implementation is unspecified. The use of the wfile parameter shall
       cause that file to be initially created, if it does not exist, or shall
       replace the contents of an existing file.

       The b, r, s, t, w, y, and : command verbs shall accept additional argu‐
       ments.  The following synopses indicate which arguments shall be	 sepa‐
       rated from the command verbs by a single <space>.

       The a and r commands schedule text for later output. The text specified
       for the a command, and the contents of the file	specified  for	the  r
       command,	 shall	be  written  to	 standard  output just before the next
       attempt to fetch a line of input when executing the N or n commands, or
       when  reaching  the end of the script. If written when reaching the end
       of the script, and the -n option was not specified, the text  shall  be
       written	after  copying	the pattern space to standard output. The con‐
       tents of the file specified for the r command shall be as of  the  time
       the  output is written, not the time the r command is applied. The text
       shall be output in the order in which the a and r commands were applied
       to the input.

       Command	verbs  other than {, a, b, c, i, r, t, w, :, and # can be fol‐
       lowed by a semicolon, optional <blank>s, and another command verb. How‐
       ever,  when  the	 s  command verb is used with the w flag, following it
       with another command in this manner produces undefined results.

       A function can be preceded by one or more '!' characters, in which case
       the  function  shall be applied if the addresses do not select the pat‐
       tern space. Zero or more <blank>s shall be accepted  before  the	 first
       '!'  character.	It  is	unspecified  whether <blank>s can follow a '!'
       character, and conforming applications shall not follow a '!'   charac‐
       ter with <blank>s.

       [2addr] {function

       function

       ...

       }      Execute  a  list of sed functions only when the pattern space is
	      selected. The list of  sed  functions  shall  be	surrounded  by
	      braces and separated by <newline>s, and conform to the following
	      rules. The braces can be preceded or followed by	<blank>s.  The
	      functions can be preceded by <blank>s, but shall not be followed
	      by <blank>s. The <right-brace> shall be preceded by a  <newline>
	      and can be preceded or followed by <blank>s.

       [1addr]a\

       text   Write text to standard output as described previously.

       [2addr]b [label]

	      Branch  to  the  :  function  bearing the label. If label is not
	      specified, branch to the end of the script.  The	implementation
	      shall support labels recognized as unique up to at least 8 char‐
	      acters; the actual length (greater than  or  equal  to  8)  that
	      shall  be supported by the implementation is unspecified.	 It is
	      unspecified whether exceeding a label length causes an error  or
	      a silent truncation.

       [2addr]c\

       text   Delete the pattern space. With a 0 or 1 address or at the end of
	      a 2-address range, place text on the output and start  the  next
	      cycle.

       [2addr]d
	      Delete the pattern space and start the next cycle.

       [2addr]D
	      Delete  the  initial  segment  of	 the pattern space through the
	      first <newline> and start the next cycle.

       [2addr]g
	      Replace the contents of the pattern space by the contents of the
	      hold space.

       [2addr]G
	      Append to the pattern space a <newline> followed by the contents
	      of the hold space.

       [2addr]h
	      Replace the contents of the hold space with the contents of  the
	      pattern space.

       [2addr]H
	      Append to the hold space a <newline> followed by the contents of
	      the pattern space.

       [1addr]i\

       text   Write text to standard output.

       [2addr]l
	      (The letter ell.) Write the pattern space to standard output  in
	      a	 visually  unambiguous form. The characters listed in the Base
	      Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,  Table  5-1,	Escape
	      Sequences	 and  Associated Actions ( '\\' , '\a' , '\b' , '\f' ,
	      '\r' , '\t' , '\v' )  shall  be  written	as  the	 corresponding
	      escape  sequence; the '\n' in that table is not applicable. Non-
	      printable characters not in that table shall be written  as  one
	      three-digit  octal  number (with a preceding backslash) for each
	      byte in the character (most significant byte first). If the size
	      of  a byte on the system is greater than 9 bits, the format used
	      for non-printable characters is implementation-defined.

       Long lines shall be folded, with the  point  of	folding	 indicated  by
       writing	a backslash followed by a <newline>; the length at which fold‐
       ing occurs is unspecified, but should be	 appropriate  for  the	output
       device. The end of each line shall be marked with a '$' .

       [2addr]n
	      Write the pattern space to standard output if the default output
	      has not been suppressed, and replace the pattern space with  the
	      next line of input, less its terminating <newline>.

       If  no next line of input is available, the n command verb shall branch
       to the end of the script and quit without starting a new cycle.

       [2addr]N
	      Append the next line of input, less its  terminating  <newline>,
	      to  the  pattern	space, using an embedded <newline> to separate
	      the appended material from the original material. Note that  the
	      current line number changes.

       If  no next line of input is available, the N command verb shall branch
       to the end of the script and quit without starting a new cycle or copy‐
       ing the pattern space to standard output.

       [2addr]p
	      Write the pattern space to standard output.

       [2addr]P
	      Write  the pattern space, up to the first <newline>, to standard
	      output.

       [1addr]q
	      Branch to the end of the script and quit without starting a  new
	      cycle.

       [1addr]r	 rfile
	      Copy  the contents of rfile to standard output as described pre‐
	      viously.	If rfile does not exist or cannot be read, it shall be
	      treated as if it were an empty file, causing no error condition.

       [2addr]s/BRE/replacement/flags

	      Substitute  the  replacement  string for instances of the BRE in
	      the pattern space. Any character other than backslash  or	 <new‐
	      line>  can be used instead of a slash to delimit the BRE and the
	      replacement. Within the BRE and the replacement, the BRE	delim‐
	      iter itself can be used as a literal character if it is preceded
	      by a backslash.

       The replacement string shall be	scanned	 from  beginning  to  end.  An
       ampersand ( '&' ) appearing in the replacement shall be replaced by the
       string matching the BRE. The special meaning of '&' in this context can
       be  suppressed  by  preceding  it  by a backslash. The characters "\n",
       where n is a digit, shall be replaced by the text matched by the corre‐
       sponding	 backreference expression. The special meaning of "\n" where n
       is a digit in this context, can be suppressed  by  preceding  it	 by  a
       backslash.  For each other backslash ( '\' ) encountered, the following
       character shall lose its special meaning (if any). The meaning of a '\'
       immediately  followed  by any character other than '&' , '\' , a digit,
       or the delimiter character used for this command, is unspecified.

       A line can be split by substituting a <newline> into it.	 The  applica‐
       tion shall escape the <newline> in the replacement by preceding it by a
       backslash. A substitution shall be considered to	 have  been  performed
       even  if	 the  replacement  string  is  identical to the string that it
       replaces. Any backslash used to alter the default meaning of  a	subse‐
       quent  character	 shall	be  discarded  from the BRE or the replacement
       before evaluating the BRE or using the replacement.

       The value of flags shall be zero or more of:

       n
	      Substitute for the nth occurrence only of the BRE	 found	within
	      the pattern space.

       g
	      Globally substitute for all non-overlapping instances of the BRE
	      rather than just the first one. If both g and n  are  specified,
	      the results are unspecified.

       p
	      Write  the pattern space to standard output if a replacement was
	      made.

       w  wfile
	      Write. Append the pattern space to wfile if  a  replacement  was
	      made.  A conforming application shall precede the wfile argument
	      with one or more <blank>s. If the w flag is not  the  last  flag
	      value  given  in	a  concatenation  of multiple flag values, the
	      results are undefined.

       [2addr]t [label]

	      Test. Branch to the : command verb bearing the label if any sub‐
	      stitutions  have	been  made since the most recent reading of an
	      input line or execution of a  t.	If  label  is  not  specified,
	      branch to the end of the script.

       [2addr]w	 wfile

	      Append (write) the pattern space to wfile.

       [2addr]x
	      Exchange the contents of the pattern and hold spaces.

       [2addr]y/string1/string2/

	      Replace all occurrences of characters in string1 with the corre‐
	      sponding characters in string2. If a backslash  followed	by  an
	      'n'  appear  in  string1 or string2, the two characters shall be
	      handled as a single <newline>. If the number  of	characters  in
	      string1  and  string2 are not equal, or if any of the characters
	      in string1 appear more than once, the results are undefined. Any
	      character	 other than backslash or <newline> can be used instead
	      of slash to delimit the strings. If  the	delimiter  is  not  n,
	      within  string1 and string2, the delimiter itself can be used as
	      a literal character if it is preceded  by	 a  backslash.	 If  a
	      backslash character is immediately followed by a backslash char‐
	      acter in string1 or string2, the two backslash characters	 shall
	      be  counted as a single literal backslash character. The meaning
	      of a backslash followed by any character that is	not  'n'  ,  a
	      backslash, or the delimiter character is undefined.

       [0addr]:label
	      Do nothing. This command bears a label to which the b and t com‐
	      mands branch.

       [1addr]=
	      Write the following to standard output:

	      "%d\n", <current line number>

       [0addr]
	      Ignore this empty command.

       [0addr]#
	      Ignore the '#' and the remainder of the line (treat  them	 as  a
	      comment),	 with the single exception that if the first two char‐
	      acters in the script are "#n" , the default output shall be sup‐
	      pressed;	this  shall  be the equivalent of specifying -n on the
	      command line.

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values shall be returned:

	0     Successful completion.

       >0     An error occurred.

CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
       Default.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE
       Regular expressions match entire strings, not  just  individual	lines,
       but  a  <newline>  is  matched  by '\n' in a sed RE; a <newline> is not
       allowed	by  the	 general   definition	of   regular   expression   in
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.   Also  note  that '\n' cannot be used to match a
       <newline> at the end of an arbitrary input line; <newline>s  appear  in
       the pattern space as a result of the N editing command.

EXAMPLES
       This  sed  script  simulates  the  BSD cat -s command, squeezing excess
       blank lines from standard input.

	      sed -n '
	      # Write non-empty lines.
	      /./ {
		  p
		  d
		  }
	      # Write a single empty line, then look for more empty lines.
	      /^$/    p
	      # Get next line, discard the held <newline> (empty line),
	      # and look for more empty lines.
	      :Empty
	      /^$/    {
		  N
		  s/.//
		  b Empty
		  }
	      # Write the non-empty line before going back to search
	      # for the first in a set of empty lines.
		  p

RATIONALE
       This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires implementations to support
       at  least  ten  distinct	 wfiles,  matching historical practice on many
       implementations. Implementations are encouraged to  support  more,  but
       conforming applications should not exceed this limit.

       The exit status codes specified here are different from those in System
       V. System V returns 2 for garbled sed commands, but returns  zero  with
       its  usage  message or if the input file could not be opened. The stan‐
       dard developers considered this to be a bug.

       The manner in which the l command writes non-printable  characters  was
       changed	to avoid the historical backspace-overstrike method, and other
       requirements to achieve unambiguous output were added. See  the	RATIO‐
       NALE for ed for details of the format chosen, which is the same as that
       chosen for sed.

       This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires implementations to provide
       pattern	and  hold  spaces of at least 8192 bytes, larger than the 4000
       bytes spaces used by some historical implementations, but less than the
       20480  bytes  limit  used  in  an  early	 proposal. Implementations are
       encouraged to allocate dynamically larger pattern and  hold  spaces  as
       needed.

       The  requirements  for  acceptance  of <blank>s and <space>s in command
       lines has been made more explicit than in early proposals  to  describe
       clearly	the  historical	 practice  and	to  remove confusion about the
       phrase "protect initial blanks [sic] and tabs from the  stripping  that
       is  done	 on  every script line" that appears in much of the historical
       documentation of the sed utility description of text. (Not  all	imple‐
       mentations  are	known  to  have	 stripped  <blank>s  from  text lines,
       although they all have allowed leading <blank>s preceding  the  address
       on a command line.)

       The treatment of '#' comments differs from the SVID which only allows a
       comment as the first line of the script, but matches BSD-derived imple‐
       mentations.  The	 comment character is treated as a command, and it has
       the same properties in terms of being accepted with  leading  <blank>s;
       the BSD implementation has historically supported this.

       Early  proposals required that a script_file have at least one non-com‐
       ment line. Some historical implementations have behaved	in  unexpected
       ways if this were not the case. The standard developers considered that
       this was incorrect behavior and that application developers should  not
       have  to avoid this feature. A correct implementation of this volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 shall permit script_files  that  consist  only  of
       comment lines.

       Early  proposals	 indicated  that if -e and -f options were intermixed,
       all -e options were processed before any	 -f  options.  This  has  been
       changed	to process them in the order presented because it matches his‐
       torical practice and is more intuitive.

       The treatment of the p flag to the s command differs between  System  V
       and BSD-based systems when the default output is suppressed. In the two
       examples:

	      echo a | sed    's/a/A/p'
	      echo a | sed -n 's/a/A/p'

       this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, BSD, System V  documentation,  and
       the SVID indicate that the first example should write two lines with A,
       whereas the second should write one.  Some System V systems write the A
       only  once  in  both  examples  because the p flag is ignored if the -n
       option is not specified.

       This is a case of a diametrical difference between systems  that	 could
       not  be	reconciled through the compromise of declaring the behavior to
       be  unspecified.	 The  SVID/BSD/System  V  documentation	 behavior  was
       adopted for this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 because:

	* No  known documentation for any historic system describes the inter‐
	  action between the p flag and the -n option.

	* The selected behavior is more correct as there is no technical  jus‐
	  tification for any interaction between the p flag and the -n option.
	  A relationship between -n and the p flag might imply that  they  are
	  only	used  together,	 but this ignores valid scripts that interrupt
	  the cyclical nature of the processing through the use of the	D,  d,
	  q, or branching commands. Such scripts rely on the p suffix to write
	  the pattern space because they do not make use of the default output
	  at the "bottom" of the script.

	* Because  the -n option makes the p flag unnecessary, any interaction
	  would only be useful if sed scripts were written to  run  both  with
	  and  without	the  -n option. This is believed to be unlikely. It is
	  even more unlikely that programmers have coded the p flag  expecting
	  it  to  be unnecessary.  Because the interaction was not documented,
	  the likelihood of  a	programmer  discovering	 the  interaction  and
	  depending on it is further decreased.

	* Finally, scripts that break under the specified behavior produce too
	  much output instead of too little, which is easier to	 diagnose  and
	  correct.

       The  form  of the substitute command that uses the n suffix was limited
       to the first 512 matches in an early  proposal.	This  limit  has  been
       removed	because	 there	is  no	reason	an  editor processing lines of
       {LINE_MAX} length should have this restriction. The command  s/a/A/2047
       should be able to substitute the 2047th occurrence of a on a line.

       The  b, t, and : commands are documented to ignore leading white space,
       but no mention is made of trailing white space. Historical  implementa‐
       tions  of sed assigned different locations to the labels 'x' and "x " .
       This is not useful, and leads to subtle programming errors, but	it  is
       historical  practice, and changing it could theoretically break working
       scripts. Implementors are encouraged to provide warning messages	 about
       labels that are never used or jumps to labels that do not exist.

       Historically,  the sed ! and } editing commands did not permit multiple
       commands on a single line using a semicolon  as	a  command  delimiter.
       Implementations are permitted, but not required, to support this exten‐
       sion.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       None.

SEE ALSO
       awk , ed , grep

COPYRIGHT
       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in  electronic  form
       from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology
       -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX),	The  Open  Group  Base
       Specifications  Issue  6,  Copyright  (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of
       Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open  Group.  In  the
       event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and
       The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group  Standard
       is  the	referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online
       at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

IEEE/The Open Group		     2003				SED(P)
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