AWK(1) User Commands AWK(1)
NAME
awk - pattern scanning and processing language
SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/awk [
-F ERE] [
-v assignment]
'program' |
-f progfile...
[
argument]...
/usr/bin/nawk [
-F ERE] [
-v assignment]
'program' |
-f progfile...
[
argument]...
/usr/xpg4/bin/awk [
-F ERE] [
-v assignment]...
'program' |
-f progfile...
[
argument]...
DESCRIPTION
NOTE: The
nawk command is now the system default awk for illumos.
The
/usr/bin/awk and
/usr/xpg4/bin/awk utilities execute
programs
written in the
awk programming language, which is specialized for
textual data manipulation. A
awk program is a sequence of patterns
and corresponding actions. The string specifying
program must be
enclosed in single quotes (') to protect it from interpretation by
the shell. The sequence of pattern - action statements can be
specified in the command line as
program or in one, or more, file(s)
specified by the
-fprogfile option. When input is read that matches a
pattern, the action associated with the pattern is performed.
Input is interpreted as a sequence of records. By default, a record
is a line, but this can be changed by using the
RS built-in variable.
Each record of input is matched to each pattern in the
program. For
each pattern matched, the associated action is executed.
The
awk utility interprets each input record as a sequence of fields
where, by default, a field is a string of non-blank characters. This
default white-space field delimiter (blanks and/or tabs) can be
changed by using the
FS built-in variable or the
-FERE option. The
awk utility denotes the first field in a record
$1, the second
$2,
and so forth. The symbol
$0 refers to the entire record; setting any
other field causes the reevaluation of
$0. Assigning to
$0 resets the
values of all fields and the
NF built-in variable.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-F ERE Define the input field separator to be the extended
regular expression
ERE, before any input is read
(can be a character).
-f progfile Specifies the pathname of the file
progfile containing a
awk program. If multiple instances of
this option are specified, the concatenation of the
files specified as
progfile in the order specified
is the
awk program. The
awk program can
alternatively be specified in the command line as a
single argument.
-v assignment The
assignment argument must be in the same form as
an
assignment operand. The assignment is of the form
var=value, where
var is the name of one of the
variables described below. The specified assignment
occurs before executing the
awk program, including
the actions associated with
BEGIN patterns (if any).
Multiple occurrences of this option can be
specified.
-safe When passed to
awk, this flag will prevent the
program from opening new files or running child
processes. The
ENVIRON array will also not be
initialized.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
program If no
-f option is specified, the first operand to
awk is
the text of the
awk program. The application supplies the
program operand as a single argument to
awk. If the text
does not end in a newline character,
awk interprets the
text as if it did.
argument Either of the following two types of
argument can be
intermixed:
file A pathname of a file that contains the
input to be read, which is matched against
the set of patterns in the program. If no
file operands are specified, or if a
file operand is
-, the standard input is used.
assignment An operand that begins with an underscore
or alphabetic character from the portable
character set, followed by a sequence of
underscores, digits and alphabetics from
the portable character set, followed by the
= character specifies a variable assignment
rather than a pathname. The characters
before the
= represent the name of a
awk variable. If that name is a
awk reserved
word, the behavior is undefined. The
characters following the equal sign is
interpreted as if they appeared in the
awk program preceded and followed by a double-
quote (
") character, as a
STRING token,
except that if the last character is an
unescaped backslash, it is interpreted as a
literal backslash rather than as the first
character of the sequence
\.. The variable
is assigned the value of that
STRING token.
If the value is considered a
numeric string, the variable is assigned its
numeric value. Each such variable
assignment is performed just before the
processing of the following
file, if any.
Thus, an assignment before the first
file argument is executed after the
BEGIN actions (if any), while an assignment after
the last
file argument is executed before
the
END actions (if any). If there are no
file arguments, assignments are executed
before processing the standard input.
INPUT FILES
Input files to the
awk program from any of the following sources:
o any
file operands or their equivalents, achieved by
modifying the
awk variables
ARGV and
ARGC o standard input in the absence of any
file operands
o arguments to the
getline function
must be text files. Whether the variable
RS is set to a value other
than a newline character or not, for these files, implementations
support records terminated with the specified separator up to
{LINE_MAX} bytes and can support longer records.
If
-f progfile is specified, the files named by each of the
progfile option-arguments must be text files containing an
awk program.
The standard input are used only if no
file operands are specified,
or if a
file operand is
-.
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
A
awk program is composed of pairs of the form:
pattern {
action }
Either the pattern or the action (including the enclosing brace
characters) can be omitted. Pattern-action statements are separated
by a semicolon or by a newline.
A missing pattern matches any record of input, and a missing action
is equivalent to an action that writes the matched record of input to
standard output.
Execution of the
awk program starts by first executing the actions
associated with all
BEGIN patterns in the order they occur in the
program. Then each
file operand (or standard input if no files were
specified) is processed by reading data from the file until a record
separator is seen (a newline character by default), splitting the
current record into fields using the current value of
FS, evaluating
each pattern in the program in the order of occurrence, and executing
the action associated with each pattern that matches the current
record. The action for a matching pattern is executed before
evaluating subsequent patterns. Last, the actions associated with all
END patterns is executed in the order they occur in the program.
Expressions in awk
Expressions describe computations used in
patterns and
actions. In
the following table, valid expression operations are given in groups
from highest precedence first to lowest precedence last, with equal-
precedence operators grouped between horizontal lines. In expression
evaluation, where the grammar is formally ambiguous, higher
precedence operators are evaluated before lower precedence operators.
In this table
expr, expr1, expr2, and
expr3 represent any expression,
while
lvalue represents any entity that can be assigned to (that is,
on the left side of an assignment operator).
Syntax Name Type of Result Associativity -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(
expr ) Grouping type of
expr n/a
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$
expr Field reference string n/a
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
++
lvalue Pre-increment numeric n/a
--
lvalue Pre-decrement numeric n/a
lvalue ++ Post-increment numeric n/a
lvalue -- Post-decrement numeric n/a
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr ^
expr Exponentiation numeric right
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
!
expr Logical not numeric n/a
+
expr Unary plus numeric n/a
-
expr Unary minus numeric n/a
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr *
expr Multiplication numeric left
expr /
expr Division numeric left
expr %
expr Modulus numeric left
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr +
expr Addition numeric left
expr -
expr Subtraction numeric left
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr expr String concatenation string left
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr <
expr Less than numeric none
expr <=
expr Less than or equal to numeric none
expr !=
expr Not equal to numeric none
expr ==
expr Equal to numeric none
expr >
expr Greater than numeric none
expr >=
expr Greater than or equal to numeric none
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr ~
expr ERE match numeric none
expr !~
expr ERE non-match numeric none
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr in array Array membership numeric left
(
index ) in Multi-dimension array numeric left
array membership
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr &&
expr Logical AND numeric left
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr ||
expr Logical OR numeric left
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
expr1 ?
expr2 Conditional expression type of selected right
:
expr3 expr2 or
expr3 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
lvalue ^=
expr Exponentiation numeric right
assignment
lvalue %=
expr Modulus assignment numeric right
lvalue *=
expr Multiplication numeric right
assignment
lvalue /=
expr Division assignment numeric right
lvalue +=
expr Addition assignment numeric right
lvalue -=
expr Subtraction assignment numeric right
lvalue =
expr Assignment type of
expr right
Each expression has either a string value, a numeric value or both.
Except as stated for specific contexts, the value of an expression is
implicitly converted to the type needed for the context in which it
is used. A string value is converted to a numeric value by the
equivalent of the following calls:
setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, "");
numeric_value = atof(
string_value);
A numeric value that is exactly equal to the value of an integer is
converted to a string by the equivalent of a call to the
sprintf function with the string
%d as the
fmt argument and the numeric value
being converted as the first and only
expr argument. Any other
numeric value is converted to a string by the equivalent of a call to
the
sprintf function with the value of the variable
CONVFMT as the
fmt argument and the numeric value being converted as the first and
only
expr argument.
A string value is considered to be a
numeric string in the following
case:
1. Any leading and trailing blank characters is ignored.
2. If the first unignored character is a
+ or
-, it is
ignored.
3. If the remaining unignored characters would be lexically
recognized as a
NUMBER token, the string is considered a
numeric string.
If a
- character is ignored in the above steps, the numeric value of
the
numeric string is the negation of the numeric value of the
recognized
NUMBER token. Otherwise the numeric value of the
numeric string is the numeric value of the recognized
NUMBER token. Whether
or not a string is a
numeric string is relevant only in contexts
where that term is used in this section.
When an expression is used in a Boolean context, if it has a numeric
value, a value of zero is treated as false and any other value is
treated as true. Otherwise, a string value of the null string is
treated as false and any other value is treated as true. A Boolean
context is one of the following:
o the first subexpression of a conditional expression.
o an expression operated on by logical NOT, logical
AND, or
logical OR.
o the second expression of a
for statement.
o the expression of an
if statement.
o the expression of the
while clause in either a
while or
do ... while statement.
o an expression used as a pattern (as in Overall Program
Structure).
The
awk language supplies arrays that are used for storing numbers or
strings. Arrays need not be declared. They are initially empty, and
their sizes changes dynamically. The subscripts, or element
identifiers, are strings, providing a type of associative array
capability. An array name followed by a subscript within square
brackets can be used as an
lvalue and as an expression, as described
in the grammar. Unsubscripted array names are used in only the
following contexts:
o a parameter in a function definition or function call.
o the
NAME token following any use of the keyword
in.
A valid array
index consists of one or more comma-separated
expressions, similar to the way in which multi-dimensional arrays are
indexed in some programming languages. Because
awk arrays are really
one-dimensional, such a comma-separated list is converted to a single
string by concatenating the string values of the separate
expressions, each separated from the other by the value of the
SUBSEP variable.
Thus, the following two index operations are equivalent:
var[expr1, expr2, ... exprn]
var[expr1 SUBSEP expr2 SUBSEP ... SUBSEP exprn]
A multi-dimensioned
index used with the
in operator must be put in
parentheses. The
in operator, which tests for the existence of a
particular array element, does not create the element if it does not
exist. Any other reference to a non-existent array element
automatically creates it.
Variables and Special Variables
Variables can be used in an
awk program by referencing them. With the
exception of function parameters, they are not explicitly declared.
Uninitialized scalar variables and array elements have both a numeric
value of zero and a string value of the empty string.
Field variables are designated by a
$ followed by a number or
numerical expression. The effect of the field number
expression evaluating to anything other than a non-negative integer is
unspecified. Uninitialized variables or string values need not be
converted to numeric values in this context. New field variables are
created by assigning a value to them. References to non-existent
fields (that is, fields after
$NF) produce the null string. However,
assigning to a non-existent field (for example,
$(NF+2) = 5)
increases the value of
NF, create any intervening fields with the
null string as their values and cause the value of
$0 to be
recomputed, with the fields being separated by the value of
OFS. Each
field variable has a string value when created. If the string, with
any occurrence of the decimal-point character from the current locale
changed to a period character, is considered a
numeric string (see
Expressions in awk above), the field variable also has the numeric
value of the
numeric string.
/usr/bin/awk, /usr/xpg4/bin/awk awk sets the following special variables that are supported by both
/usr/bin/awk and
/usr/xpg4/bin/awk:
ARGC The number of elements in the
ARGV array.
ARGV An array of command line arguments, excluding options and
the
program argument, numbered from zero to
ARGC-1.
The arguments in
ARGV can be modified or added to;
ARGC can be altered. As each input file ends,
awk treats the
next non-null element of
ARGV, up to the current value of
ARGC-1, inclusive, as the name of the next input file.
Setting an element of
ARGV to null means that it is not
treated as an input file. The name
- indicates the
standard input. If an argument matches the format of an
assignment operand, this argument is treated as an
assignment rather than a
file argument.
CONVFMT The
printf format for converting numbers to strings
(except for output statements, where
OFMT is used). The
default is
%.6g.
ENVIRON The variable
ENVIRON is an array representing the value
of the environment. The indices of the array are strings
consisting of the names of the environment variables, and
the value of each array element is a string consisting of
the value of that variable. If the value of an
environment variable is considered a
numeric string, the
array element also has its numeric value.
In all cases where
awk behavior is affected by
environment variables (including the environment of any
commands that
awk executes via the
system function or via
pipeline redirections with the
print statement, the
printf statement, or the
getline function), the
environment used is the environment at the time
awk began
executing.
FILENAME A pathname of the current input file. Inside a
BEGIN action the value is undefined. Inside an
END action the
value is the name of the last input file processed.
FNR The ordinal number of the current record in the current
file. Inside a
BEGIN action the value is zero. Inside an
END action the value is the number of the last record
processed in the last file processed.
FS Input field separator regular expression; a space
character by default.
NF The number of fields in the current record. Inside a
BEGIN action, the use of
NF is undefined unless a
getline function without a
var argument is executed previously.
Inside an
END action,
NF retains the value it had for the
last record read, unless a subsequent, redirected,
getline function without a
var argument is performed
prior to entering the
END action.
NR The ordinal number of the current record from the start
of input. Inside a
BEGIN action the value is zero. Inside
an
END action the value is the number of the last record
processed.
OFMT The
printf format for converting numbers to strings in
output statements
"%.6g" by default. The result of the
conversion is unspecified if the value of
OFMT is not a
floating-point format specification.
OFS The
print statement output field separator; a space
character by default.
ORS The
print output record separator; a newline character by
default.
RLENGTH The length of the string matched by the
match function.
RS The first character of the string value of
RS is the
input record separator; a newline character by default.
If
RS contains more than one character, the results are
unspecified. If
RS is null, then records are separated by
sequences of one or more blank lines. Leading or trailing
blank lines do not produce empty records at the beginning
or end of input, and the field separator is always
newline, no matter what the value of
FS.
RSTART The starting position of the string matched by the
match function, numbering from 1. This is always equivalent to
the return value of the
match function.
SUBSEP The subscript separator string for multi-dimensional
arrays. The default value is
\034.
/usr/bin/awk The following variable is supported for
/usr/bin/awk only:
RT The record terminator for the most recent record read.
For most records this will be the same value as
RS. At
the end of a file with no trailing separator value,
though, this will be set to the empty string (
"").
Regular Expressions
The
awk utility makes use of the extended regular expression notation
(see
regex(7)) except that it allows the use of C-language
conventions to escape special characters within the EREs, namely
\\,
\a,
\b,
\f,
\n,
\r,
\t,
\v, and those specified in the following
table. These escape sequences are recognized both inside and outside
bracket expressions. Note that records need not be separated by
newline characters and string constants can contain newline
characters, so even the
\n sequence is valid in
awk EREs. Using a
slash character within the regular expression requires escaping as
shown in the table below:
Escape Sequence Description Meaning ----------------------------------------------------------------------
\" Backslash quotation-mark Quotation-mark character
----------------------------------------------------------------------
\/ Backslash slash Slash character
----------------------------------------------------------------------
\ddd A backslash character The character encoded by
followed by the longest the one-, two- or
sequence of one, two, or three-digit octal
three octal-digit integer. Multi-byte
characters (01234567). characters require
If all of the digits are multiple, concatenated
0, (that is, escape sequences,
representation of the including the leading \
NULL character), the for each byte.
behavior is undefined.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
\c A backslash character Undefined
followed by any
character not described
in this table or special
characters (
\\,
\a,
\b,
\f,
\n,
\r,
\t,
\v).
A regular expression can be matched against a specific field or
string by using one of the two regular expression matching operators,
~ and
!~. These operators interpret their right-hand operand as a
regular expression and their left-hand operand as a string. If the
regular expression matches the string, the
~ expression evaluates to
the value
1, and the
!~ expression evaluates to the value
0. If the
regular expression does not match the string, the
~ expression
evaluates to the value
0, and the
!~ expression evaluates to the
value
1. If the right-hand operand is any expression other than the
lexical token
ERE, the string value of the expression is interpreted
as an extended regular expression, including the escape conventions
described above. Notice that these same escape conventions also are
applied in the determining the value of a string literal (the lexical
token
STRING), and is applied a second time when a string literal is
used in this context.
When an
ERE token appears as an expression in any context other than
as the right-hand of the
~ or
!~ operator or as one of the built-in
function arguments described below, the value of the resulting
expression is the equivalent of:
$0 ~ /
ere/
The
ere argument to the
gsub, match, sub functions, and the
fs argument to the
split function (see
String Functions) is interpreted
as extended regular expressions. These can be either
ERE tokens or
arbitrary expressions, and are interpreted in the same manner as the
right-hand side of the
~ or
!~ operator.
An extended regular expression can be used to separate fields by
using the
-F ERE option or by assigning a string containing the
expression to the built-in variable
FS. The default value of the
FS variable is a single space character. The following describes
FS behavior:
1. If
FS is a single character:
o If
FS is the space character, skip leading and
trailing blank characters; fields are delimited by
sets of one or more blank characters.
o Otherwise, if
FS is any other character
c, fields are
delimited by each single occurrence of
c.
2. Otherwise, the string value of
FS is considered to be an
extended regular expression. Each occurrence of a sequence
matching the extended regular expression delimits fields.
Except in the
gsub,
match,
split, and
sub built-in functions, regular
expression matching is based on input records. That is, record
separator characters (the first character of the value of the
variable
RS, a newline character by default) cannot be embedded in
the expression, and no expression matches the record separator
character. If the record separator is not a newline character,
newline characters embedded in the expression can be matched. In
those four built-in functions, regular expression matching are based
on text strings. So, any character (including the newline character
and the record separator) can be embedded in the pattern and an
appropriate pattern matches any character. However, in all
awk regular expression matching, the use of one or more NULL characters
in the pattern, input record or text string produces undefined
results.
Patterns
A
pattern is any valid
expression, a range specified by two
expressions separated by comma, or one of the two special patterns
BEGIN or
END.
Special Patterns
The
awk utility recognizes two special patterns,
BEGIN and
END. Each
BEGIN pattern is matched once and its associated action executed
before the first record of input is read (except possibly by use of
the
getline function in a prior
BEGIN action) and before command line
assignment is done. Each
END pattern is matched once and its
associated action executed after the last record of input has been
read. These two patterns have associated actions.
BEGIN and
END do not combine with other patterns. Multiple
BEGIN and
END patterns are allowed. The actions associated with the
BEGIN patterns are executed in the order specified in the program, as are
the
END actions. An
END pattern can precede a
BEGIN pattern in a
program.
If an
awk program consists of only actions with the pattern
BEGIN,
and the
BEGIN action contains no
getline function,
awk exits without
reading its input when the last statement in the last
BEGIN action is
executed. If an
awk program consists of only actions with the pattern
END or only actions with the patterns
BEGIN and
END, the input is
read before the statements in the
END actions are executed.
Expression Patterns
An expression pattern is evaluated as if it were an expression in a
Boolean context. If the result is true, the pattern is considered to
match, and the associated action (if any) is executed. If the result
is false, the action is not executed.
Pattern Ranges
A pattern range consists of two expressions separated by a comma. In
this case, the action is performed for all records between a match of
the first expression and the following match of the second
expression, inclusive. At this point, the pattern range can be
repeated starting at input records subsequent to the end of the
matched range.
Actions
An action is a sequence of statements. A statement can be one of the
following:
if (
expression )
statement [ else
statement ]
while (
expression )
statement do
statement while (
expression )
for (
expression ;
expression ;
expression )
statement for (
var in
array )
statement delete
array[
subscript] #delete an array element
delete
array #delete all elements within an array
break
continue
{ [
statement ] ... }
expression # commonly variable = expression
print [
expression-list ] [ >
expression ]
printf format [ ,
expression-list ] [ >
expression ]
next # skip remaining patterns on this input line
nextfile # skip remaining patterns on this input file
exit [expr] # skip the rest of the input; exit status is expr
return [expr]
Any single statement can be replaced by a statement list enclosed in
braces. The statements are terminated by newline characters or
semicolons, and are executed sequentially in the order that they
appear.
The
next statement causes all further processing of the current input
record to be abandoned. The behavior is undefined if a
next statement
appears or is invoked in a
BEGIN or
END action.
The
nextfile statement is similar to
next, but also skips all other
records in the current file, and moves on to processing the next
input file if available (or exits the program if there are none).
(Note that this keyword is not supported by
/usr/xpg4/bin/awk.)
The
exit statement invokes all
END actions in the order in which they
occur in the program source and then terminate the program without
reading further input. An
exit statement inside an
END action
terminates the program without further execution of
END actions. If
an expression is specified in an
exit statement, its numeric value is
the exit status of
awk, unless subsequent errors are encountered or a
subsequent
exit statement with an expression is executed.
Output Statements
Both
print and
printf statements write to standard output by default.
The output is written to the location specified by
output_redirection if one is supplied, as follows:
> expression>> expression| expression In all cases, the
expression is evaluated to produce a string that is
used as a full pathname to write into (for
> or
>>) or as a command
to be executed (for
|). Using the first two forms, if the file of
that name is not currently open, it is opened, creating it if
necessary and using the first form, truncating the file. The output
then is appended to the file. As long as the file remains open,
subsequent calls in which
expression evaluates to the same string
value simply appends output to the file. The file remains open until
the
close function, which is called with an expression that evaluates
to the same string value.
The third form writes output onto a stream piped to the input of a
command. The stream is created if no stream is currently open with
the value of
expression as its command name. The stream created is
equivalent to one created by a call to the
popen(3C) function with
the value of
expression as the
command argument and a value of
w as
the
mode argument. As long as the stream remains open, subsequent
calls in which
expression evaluates to the same string value writes
output to the existing stream. The stream remains open until the
close function is called with an expression that evaluates to the
same string value. At that time, the stream is closed as if by a
call to the
pclose function.
These output statements take a comma-separated list of
expression s referred in the grammar by the non-terminal symbols
expr_list, print_expr_list or
print_expr_list_opt. This list is referred to here
as the
expression list, and each member is referred to as an
expression argument.
The
print statement writes the value of each expression argument onto
the indicated output stream separated by the current output field
separator (see variable
OFS above), and terminated by the output
record separator (see variable
ORS above). All expression arguments
is taken as strings, being converted if necessary; with the exception
that the
printf format in
OFMT is used instead of the value in
CONVFMT. An empty expression list stands for the whole input record
($0
).
The
printf statement produces output based on a notation similar to
the File Format Notation used to describe file formats in this
document Output is produced as specified with the first expression
argument as the string
format and subsequent expression arguments as
the strings
arg1 to
argn, inclusive, with the following exceptions:
1. The
format is an actual character string rather than a
graphical representation. Therefore, it cannot contain
empty character positions. The space character in the
format string, in any context other than a
flag of a
conversion specification, is treated as an ordinary
character that is copied to the output.
2. If the character set contains a Delta character and that
character appears in the
format string, it is treated as
an ordinary character that is copied to the output.
3. The
escape sequences beginning with a backslash character
is treated as sequences of ordinary characters that are
copied to the output. Note that these same sequences is
interpreted lexically by
awk when they appear in literal
strings, but they is not treated specially by the
printf statement.
4. A
field width or
precision can be specified as the
* character instead of a digit string. In this case the next
argument from the expression list is fetched and its
numeric value taken as the field width or precision.
5. The implementation does not precede or follow output from
the
d or
u conversion specifications with blank characters
not specified by the
format string.
6. The implementation does not precede output from the
o conversion specification with leading zeros not specified
by the
format string.
7. For the
c conversion specification: if the argument has a
numeric value, the character whose encoding is that value
is output. If the value is zero or is not the encoding of
any character in the character set, the behavior is
undefined. If the argument does not have a numeric value,
the first character of the string value is output; if the
string does not contain any characters the behavior is
undefined.
8. For each conversion specification that consumes an
argument, the next expression argument is evaluated. With
the exception of the
c conversion, the value is converted
to the appropriate type for the conversion specification.
9. If there are insufficient expression arguments to satisfy
all the conversion specifications in the
format string,
the behavior is undefined.
10. If any character sequence in the
format string begins with
a % character, but does not form a valid conversion
specification, the behavior is unspecified.
Both
print and
printf can output at least
{LINE_MAX} bytes.
Functions
The
awk language has a variety of built-in functions: arithmetic,
string, input/output and general.
Arithmetic Functions
The arithmetic functions, except for
int, are based on the
ISO C standard. The behavior is undefined in cases where the
ISO C standard
specifies that an error be returned or that the behavior is
undefined. Although the grammar permits built-in functions to appear
with no arguments or parentheses, unless the argument or parentheses
are indicated as optional in the following list (by displaying them
within the
[ ] brackets), such use is undefined.
atan2(y,
x) Return arctangent of
y/
x.
cos(
x)
Return cosine of
x, where
x is in radians.
sin(
x)
Return sine of
x, where
x is in radians.
exp(
x)
Return the exponential function of
x.
log(
x)
Return the natural logarithm of
x.
sqrt(
x)
Return the square root of
x.
int(
x)
Truncate its argument to an integer. It is truncated
toward 0 when
x > 0.
rand() Return a random number
n, such that 0 <=
n < 1.
srand([
expr])
Set the seed value for
rand to
expr or use the time
of day if
expr is omitted. The previous seed value
is returned.
String Functions
The string functions in the following list shall be supported.
Although the grammar permits built-in functions to appear with no
arguments or parentheses, unless the argument or parentheses are
indicated as optional in the following list (by displaying them
within the
[ ] brackets), such use is undefined.
gsub(
ere,
repl[,
in])
Behave like
sub (see below), except that it replaces all
occurrences of the regular expression (like the
ed utility global
substitute) in
$0 or in the
in argument, when specified.
index(
s,
t)
Return the position, in characters, numbering from 1, in string
s where string
t first occurs, or zero if it does not occur at all.
length[([
v])]
Given no argument, this function returns the length of the whole
record,
$0. If given an array as an argument (and using
/usr/bin/awk), then this returns the number of elements it
contains. Otherwise, this function interprets the argument as a
string (performing any needed conversions) and returns its length
in characters.
match(
s,
ere)
Return the position, in characters, numbering from 1, in string
s where the extended regular expression
ere occurs, or zero if it
does not occur at all.
RSTART is set to the starting position
(which is the same as the returned value), zero if no match is
found;
RLENGTH is set to the length of the matched string, -1 if
no match is found.
split(
s,
a[,
fs])
Split the string
s into array elements
a[1],
a[2],
..., a[
n], and
return
n. The separation is done with the extended regular
expression
fs or with the field separator
FS if
fs is not given.
Each array element has a string value when created. If the
string assigned to any array element, with any occurrence of the
decimal-point character from the current locale changed to a
period character, would be considered a
numeric string; the array
element also has the numeric value of the
numeric string. The
effect of a null string as the value of
fs is unspecified.
sprintf(
fmt,
expr,
expr,
...)
Format the expressions according to the
printf format given by
fmt and return the resulting string.
sub(
ere,
repl[,
in])
Substitute the string
repl in place of the first instance of the
extended regular expression
ERE in string in and return the
number of substitutions. An ampersand (
& ) appearing in the
string
repl is replaced by the string from in that matches the
regular expression. An ampersand preceded with a backslash (
\ )
is interpreted as the literal ampersand character. An occurrence
of two consecutive backslashes is interpreted as just a single
literal backslash character. Any other occurrence of a backslash
(for example, preceding any other character) is treated as a
literal backslash character. If
repl is a string literal, the
handling of the ampersand character occurs after any lexical
processing, including any lexical backslash escape sequence
processing. If
in is specified and it is not an
lvalue the
behavior is undefined. If in is omitted,
awk uses the current
record (
$0) in its place.
substr(
s,
m[,
n])
Return the at most
n-character substring of
s that begins at
position
m, numbering from 1. If
n is missing, the length of the
substring is limited by the length of the string
s.
tolower(
s)
Return a string based on the string
s. Each character in
s that
is an upper-case letter specified to have a
tolower mapping by
the
LC_CTYPE category of the current locale is replaced in the
returned string by the lower-case letter specified by the
mapping. Other characters in
s are unchanged in the returned
string.
toupper(
s)
Return a string based on the string
s. Each character in
s that
is a lower-case letter specified to have a
toupper mapping by the
LC_CTYPE category of the current locale is replaced in the
returned string by the upper-case letter specified by the
mapping. Other characters in
s are unchanged in the returned
string.
All of the preceding functions that take
ERE as a parameter expect a
pattern or a string valued expression that is a regular expression as
defined below.
Input/Output and General Functions The input/output and general functions are:
close(expression)
Close the file or pipe opened by a
print or
printf statement or a call to
getline with the same string-valued
expression. If
the close was successful, the function
returns
0; otherwise, it returns non-zero.
fflush(expression)
Flush any buffered output for the file or
pipe opened by a
print or
printf statement
or a call to
getline with the same string-
valued
expression. If the flush was
successful, the function returns
0;
otherwise, it returns
EOF. If no arguments
or the empty string (
"") are given, then
all open files will be flushed. (Note that
fflush is supported in
/usr/bin/awk only.)
expression|
getline[
var]
Read a record of input from a stream piped
from the output of a command. The stream
is created if no stream is currently open
with the value of
expression as its
command name. The stream created is
equivalent to one created by a call to the
popen function with the value of
expression as the
command argument and a
value of
r as the
mode argument. As long
as the stream remains open, subsequent
calls in which
expression evaluates to the
same string value reads subsequent records
from the file. The stream remains open
until the
close function is called with an
expression that evaluates to the same
string value. At that time, the stream is
closed as if by a call to the
pclose function. If
var is missing,
$0 and
NF is
set. Otherwise,
var is set.
The
getline operator can form ambiguous
constructs when there are operators that
are not in parentheses (including
concatenate) to the left of the
| (to the
beginning of the expression containing
getline). In the context of the
$ operator,
| behaves as if it had a lower
precedence than
$. The result of
evaluating other operators is unspecified,
and all such uses of portable applications
must be put in parentheses properly.
getline Set
$0 to the next input record from the
current input file. This form of
getline sets the
NF,
NR, and
FNR variables.
getline var Set variable
var to the next input record
from the current input file. This form of
getline sets the
FNR and
NR variables.
getline [
var]
< expression Read the next record of input from a named
file. The
expression is evaluated to
produce a string that is used as a full
pathname. If the file of that name is not
currently open, it is opened. As long as
the stream remains open, subsequent calls
in which
expression evaluates to the same
string value reads subsequent records from
the file. The file remains open until the
close function is called with an
expression that evaluates to the same
string value. If
var is missing,
$0 and
NF is set. Otherwise,
var is set.
The
getline operator can form ambiguous
constructs when there are binary operators
that are not in parentheses (including
concatenate) to the right of the
< (up to
the end of the expression containing the
getline). The result of evaluating such a
construct is unspecified, and all such
uses of portable applications must be put
in parentheses properly.
system(
expression)
Execute the command given by
expression in
a manner equivalent to the
system(3C) function and return the exit status of the
command.
All forms of
getline return
1 for successful input,
0 for end of
file, and
-1 for an error.
Where strings are used as the name of a file or pipeline, the strings
must be textually identical. The terminology ``same string value''
implies that ``equivalent strings'', even those that differ only by
space characters, represent different files.
User-defined Functions The
awk language also provides user-defined functions. Such functions
can be defined as:
function name(
args,...) {
statements }
A function can be referred to anywhere in an
awk program; in
particular, its use can precede its definition. The scope of a
function is global.
Function arguments can be either scalars or arrays; the behavior is
undefined if an array name is passed as an argument that the function
uses as a scalar, or if a scalar expression is passed as an argument
that the function uses as an array. Function arguments are passed by
value if scalar and by reference if array name. Argument names are
local to the function; all other variable names are global. The same
name is not used as both an argument name and as the name of a
function or a special
awk variable. The same name must not be used
both as a variable name with global scope and as the name of a
function. The same name must not be used within the same scope both
as a scalar variable and as an array.
The number of parameters in the function definition need not match
the number of parameters in the function call. Excess formal
parameters can be used as local variables. If fewer arguments are
supplied in a function call than are in the function definition, the
extra parameters that are used in the function body as scalars are
initialized with a string value of the null string and a numeric
value of zero, and the extra parameters that are used in the function
body as arrays are initialized as empty arrays. If more arguments are
supplied in a function call than are in the function definition, the
behavior is undefined.
When invoking a function, no white space can be placed between the
function name and the opening parenthesis. Function calls can be
nested and recursive calls can be made upon functions. Upon return
from any nested or recursive function call, the values of all of the
calling function's parameters are unchanged, except for array
parameters passed by reference. The
return statement can be used to
return a value. If a
return statement appears outside of a function
definition, the behavior is undefined.
In the function definition, newline characters are optional before
the opening brace and after the closing brace. Function definitions
can appear anywhere in the program where a
pattern-action pair is
allowed.
USAGE
The
index,
length,
match, and
substr functions should not be confused
with similar functions in the
ISO C standard; the
awk versions deal
with characters, while the
ISO C standard deals with bytes.
Because the concatenation operation is represented by adjacent
expressions rather than an explicit operator, it is often necessary
to use parentheses to enforce the proper evaluation precedence.
See
largefile(7) for the description of the behavior of
awk when
encountering files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte (2^31 bytes).
EXAMPLES
The
awk program specified in the command line is most easily
specified within single-quotes (for example,
'program') for
applications using
sh, because
awk programs commonly contain
characters that are special to the shell, including double-quotes. In
the cases where a
awk program contains single-quote characters, it is
usually easiest to specify most of the program as strings within
single-quotes concatenated by the shell with quoted single-quote
characters. For example:
awk '/'\''/ { print "quote:", $0 }'
prints all lines from the standard input containing a single-quote
character, prefixed with
quote:.
The following are examples of simple
awk programs:
Example 1: Write to the standard output all input lines for which
field 3 is greater than 5:
$3 > 5 Example 2: Write every tenth line:
(NR % 10) == 0 Example 3: Write any line with a substring matching the regular
expression:
/(G|D)(2[0-9][[:alpha:]]*)/ Example 4: Print any line with a substring containing a G or D,
followed by a sequence of digits and characters:
This example uses character classes
digit and
alpha to match
language-independent digit and alphabetic characters, respectively.
/(G|D)([[:digit:][:alpha:]]*)/ Example 5: Write any line in which the second field matches the
regular expression and the fourth field does not:
$2 ~ /xyz/ && $4 !~ /xyz/ Example 6: Write any line in which the second field contains a
backslash:
$2 ~ /\\/ Example 7: Write any line in which the second field contains a
backslash (alternate method):
Notice that backslash escapes are interpreted twice, once in lexical
processing of the string and once in processing the regular
expression.
$2 ~ "\\\\" Example 8: Write the second to the last and the last field in each
line, separating the fields by a colon:
{OFS=":";print $(NF-1), $NF} Example 9: Write the line number and number of fields in each line:
The three strings representing the line number, the colon and the
number of fields are concatenated and that string is written to
standard output.
{print NR ":" NF} Example 10: Write lines longer than 72 characters:
{length($0) > 72} Example 11: Write first two fields in opposite order separated by the
OFS:
{ print $2, $1 } Example 12: Same, with input fields separated by comma or space and
tab characters, or both:
BEGIN { FS = ",[\t]*|[\t]+" } { print $2, $1 } Example 13: Add up first column, print sum and average:
{s += $1 } END {print "sum is ", s, " average is", s/NR} Example 14: Write fields in reverse order, one per line (many lines
out for each line in):
{ for (i = NF; i > 0; --i) print $i } Example 15: Write all lines between occurrences of the strings "start"
and "stop":
/start/, /stop/ Example 16: Write all lines whose first field is different from the
previous one:
$1 != prev { print; prev = $1 } Example 17: Simulate the echo command:
BEGIN { for (i = 1; i < ARGC; ++i) printf "%s%s", ARGV[i], i==ARGC-1?"\n":"" } Example 18: Write the path prefixes contained in the PATH environment
variable, one per line:
BEGIN { n = split (ENVIRON["PATH"], path, ":") for (i = 1; i <= n; ++i) print path[i] } Example 19: Print the file "input", filling in page numbers starting
at 5:
If there is a file named
input containing page headers of the form
Page#
and a file named
program that contains
/Page/{ $2 = n++; }
{ print }
then the command line
awk -f program n=5 input prints the file
input, filling in page numbers starting at 5.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
See
environ(7) for descriptions of the following environment
variables that affect execution:
LC_COLLATE,
LC_CTYPE,
LC_MESSAGES,
and
NLSPATH.
LC_NUMERIC Determine the radix character used when interpreting
numeric input, performing conversions between numeric
and string values and formatting numeric output.
Regardless of locale, the period character (the
decimal-point character of the POSIX locale) is the
decimal-point character recognized in processing
awk programs (including assignments in command-line
arguments).
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 All input files were processed successfully.
>0 An error occurred.
The exit status can be altered within the program by using an
exit expression.
SEE ALSO
ed(1),
egrep(1),
grep(1),
lex(1),
oawk(1),
sed(1),
popen(3C),
printf(3C),
system(3C),
XPG4(7),
attributes(7),
environ(7),
largefile(7),
regex(7) Aho, A. V., B. W. Kernighan, and P. J. Weinberger,
The AWK Programming Language, Addison-Wesley, 1988.
DIAGNOSTICS
If any
file operand is specified and the named file cannot be
accessed,
awk writes a diagnostic message to standard error and
terminate without any further action.
If the program specified by either the
program operand or a
progfile operand is not a valid
awk program (as specified in
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION), the behavior is undefined.
NOTES
Input white space is not preserved on output if fields are involved.
There are no explicit conversions between numbers and strings. To
force an expression to be treated as a number add 0 to it; to force
it to be treated as a string concatenate the null string (
"") to it.
June 13, 2021 AWK(1)