I'm getting totally lost in shell programming, mainly because every site I use offers different tool to do pattern matching. So my question is what tool to use to do simple pattern matching in piped stream.
context: I have named.conf file, and i need all zones names in a simple file for further processing. So I do ~$ cat named.local | grep zone and get totally lost here. My output is ~hundred or so newlines in form 'zone "domain.tld" {' and I need text in double quotes.
Thanks for showing a way to do this.
J
I think what you're looking for is
sed
... it's a stream editor which will let you do replacements on a line-by-line basis.As you're explaining it, the command `cat named.local | grep zone' gives you an output a little like this:
I'm guessing you want the output to be something like this, since you said you need the text in double quotes:
So, in reality, from each line we just want the text between the double-quotes (including the double-quotes themselves.)
I'm not sure you're familiar with Regular Expressions, but they are an invaluable tool for any person writing shell scripts. For example, the regular expression
/.o.e/
would match any line where there's a word with the 2nd letter was a lower-caseo
, and the 4th wase
. This would match string containing words like "zone
", "tone
", or even "I am tone-deaf.
"The trick there was to use the
.
(dot) character to mean "any letter". There's a couple of other special characters, such as*
which means "repeat the previous character 0 or more times". Thus a regular expression likea*
would match "a
", "aaaaaaa
", or an empty string: ""So you can match the string inside the quotes using:
/".*"/
There's another thing you would know about
sed
(and by the comments, you already do!) - it allows backtracking. Once you've told it how to recognize a word, you can have it use that word as part of the replacement. For example, let's say that you wanted to turn this list:Into this list:
First, you'd look for the string inside the quotes. We already saw that, it was
/".*"/
.Next, we want to use what's inside the quotes. We can group it using parens:
/"(.*)"/
If we wanted to replace the text with the quotes with an underscore, we'd do a replace:
s/"(.*)"/_/
, and that would leave us with:But we have backtracking! That'll let us recall what was inside the parens, using the symbol
\1
. So if we do now:s/"(.*)"/\1/
we'll get:Because the quotes weren't in the parens, they weren't part of the contents of
\1
!To only leave the stuff inside the double-quotes, we need to match the entire line. To do that we have
^
(which means "beginning of line"), and$
(which means "end of line".)So now if we use
s/^.*"(.*)".*$/\1/
, we'll get:Why? Let's read the regular expression
s/^.*"(.*)".*$/\1/
from left-to-right:s/
- Start a substitution regular expression^
- Look for the beginning of the line. Start from there..*
- Keep going, reading every character, until..."
- ... until you reach a double-quote.(
- start a group a characters we might want to recall later when backtracking..*
- Keep going, reading every character, until...)
- (pssst! close the group!)"
- ... until you reach a double-quote..*
- Keep going, reading every character, until...$
- The end of the line!/
- use what's after this to replace what you matched\1
- paste the contents of the first group (what was in the parens) matched./
- end of regular expressionIn plain English: "Read the entire line, copying aside the text between the double-quotes. Then replace the entire line with the content between the double qoutes."
You can even add double-quote around the replacing text
s/^.*"(.*)".*$/"\1"/
, so we'll get:And that can be used by
sed
to replace the line with the content from within the quotes:(This is just shell-escaped to deal with the double-quotes and slashes and stuff.)
So the whole command would be something like:
1.
2.
3.
The regexp is
.*"\([^"]*\)".*
, which matches:.*
"
\(
[^"]*
\)
"
.*
When calling
sed
, the syntax is's/what_to_match/what_to_replace_it_with/'
. The single quotes are there to keep your regexp from being expanded bybash
. When you “remember” something in the regexp using parens, you can recall it as\1
,\2
etc. Fiddle with it for a while.As long as someone is pointing out sed/awk, I'm going to point out that grep is redundant.
This gives you what you're looking for without the quotes (move the quotes inside the parenthesis to keep them). In awk, it's even simpler with the quotes:
I try to avoid pipelines as much as possible (but not more). Remember, Don't pipe cat. It's not needed. And, insomuch as awk and sed duplicating grep's work, don't pipe grep, either. At least, not into sed or awk.
Personally, I'd probably have used perl. But that's because I probably would have done the rest of whatever you're doing in perl, making it a minor detail (and being able to slurp the whole file in and regex against everything simultaneously, ignoring \n's would be a bonus for cases where I don't control /etc/bind, such as on a shared webhost). But, if I were to do it in shell, one of the above two would be the way I'd approach it.
Well, nobody mentioned
cut
yet, so, to prove that there are many ways to do something with the shell:You should have a look at awk.