I usually use the read command to read an input file to the shell script line by line. An example code such as the one below yields a wrong result if a new line isn't inserted at the end of the last line in the input file, blah.txt.
#!/bin/sh
while read line
do
echo $line
done <blah.txt
So if the input file reads something like -
One
Two
Three
Four
and I do not hit return after Four, the script fails to read the last line, and prints
One
Two
Three
Now if I leave an extra blank line after Four, like,
One
Two
Three
Four
//blank line
the output prints all the lines, including Four. However, this is not the case when I read a line using the cat
command; all lines including the last get printed without me having to add an extra blank line at the end.
Anyone has ideas on why this happens? The scripts I create will mostly be run by others, so it isn't necessary they're going to add an extra blank line at the end of every input file.
I've been trying to figure this out for ages; I'd appreciate it if you have any solutions(of course, the cat
command is one, but I'd like to know the reason behind read not working as well).
read
reads until it finds a newline character or the end of file, and returns a non-zero exit code if it encounters an end-of-file. So it's quite possible for it to both read a line and return a non-zero exit code.
Consequently, the following code is not safe if the input might not be terminated by a newline:
while read LINE; do
# do something with LINE
done
because the body of the while
won't be executed on the last line.
Technically speaking, a file not terminated with a newline is not a text file, and text tools may fail in odd ways on such a file. However, I'm always reluctant to fall back on that explanation.
One way to solve the problem is to test if what was read is non-empty (-n
):
while read -r LINE || [[ -n $LINE ]]; do
# do something with LINE
done
Other solutions include using mapfile
to read the file into an array, piping the file through some utility which is guaranteed to terminate the last line properly (grep .
, for example, if you don't want to deal with blank lines), or doing the iterative processing with a tool like awk
(which is usually my preference).
Note that -r
is almost certainly needed in the read
builtin; it causes read
to not reinterpret \
-sequences in the input.
DONE=false
until $DONE
do
read line || DONE=true
echo $line
done < blah.txt
How to use `while read` (Bash) to read the last line in a file if there’s no newline at the end of the file?
One line answer:
IFS=$'\n'; for line in $(cat file.txt); do echo "$line" ; done
Use while loop like this:
while IFS= read -r line || [ -n "$line" ]; do
echo "$line"
done <file
Or using grep
with while loop:
while IFS= read -r line; do
echo "$line"
done < <(grep "" file)
Using grep .
instead of grep ""
will skip the empty lines.
Note:
Using IFS=
keeps any line indentation intact.
You should almost always use the -r option with read.
Don't read lines with for
File without a newline at the end isn't a standard unix text file.
Below code with Redirected "while-read" loop works fine for me
while read LINE
do
let count++
echo "$count $LINE"
done < $FILENAME
echo -e "\nTotal $count Lines read"