1.\" Copyright (c) 1992, 1993 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by 5.\" the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. 6.\" 7.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 8.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 9.\" are met: 10.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 12.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 13.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 14.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 15.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 16.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 17.\" without specific prior written permission. 18.\" 19.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 20.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 21.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 22.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 23.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 24.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 25.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 26.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 27.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 28.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 29.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 30.\" 31.Dd April 8, 2021 32.Dt SED 1 33.Os 34.Sh NAME 35.Nm sed 36.Nd stream editor 37.Sh SYNOPSIS 38.Nm 39.Op Fl Ealnru 40.Ar command 41.Op Fl I Ar extension 42.Op Fl i Ar extension 43.Op Ar 44.Nm 45.Op Fl Ealnru 46.Op Fl e Ar command 47.Op Fl f Ar command_file 48.Op Fl I Ar extension 49.Op Fl i Ar extension 50.Op Ar 51.Sh DESCRIPTION 52The 53.Nm 54utility reads the specified files, or the standard input if no files 55are specified, modifying the input as specified by a list of commands. 56The input is then written to the standard output. 57.Pp 58A single command may be specified as the first argument to 59.Nm . 60Multiple commands may be specified by using the 61.Fl e 62or 63.Fl f 64options. 65All commands are applied to the input in the order they are specified 66regardless of their origin. 67.Pp 68The following options are available: 69.Bl -tag -width indent 70.It Fl E 71Interpret regular expressions as extended (modern) regular expressions 72rather than basic regular expressions (BRE's). 73The 74.Xr re_format 7 75manual page fully describes both formats. 76.It Fl a 77The files listed as parameters for the 78.Dq w 79functions are created (or truncated) before any processing begins, 80by default. 81The 82.Fl a 83option causes 84.Nm 85to delay opening each file until a command containing the related 86.Dq w 87function is applied to a line of input. 88.It Fl e Ar command 89Append the editing commands specified by the 90.Ar command 91argument 92to the list of commands. 93.It Fl f Ar command_file 94Append the editing commands found in the file 95.Ar command_file 96to the list of commands. 97The editing commands should each be listed on a separate line. 98The commands are read from the standard input if 99.Ar command_file 100is 101.Dq Li - . 102.It Fl I Ar extension 103Edit files in-place, saving backups with the specified 104.Ar extension . 105If a zero-length 106.Ar extension 107is given, no backup will be saved. 108It is not recommended to give a zero-length 109.Ar extension 110when in-place editing files, as you risk corruption or partial content 111in situations where disk space is exhausted, etc. 112.Pp 113Note that in-place editing with 114.Fl I 115still takes place in a single continuous line address space covering 116all files, although each file preserves its individuality instead of 117forming one output stream. 118The line counter is never reset between files, address ranges can span 119file boundaries, and the 120.Dq $ 121address matches only the last line of the last file. 122(See 123.Sx "Sed Addresses" . ) 124That can lead to unexpected results in many cases of in-place editing, 125where using 126.Fl i 127is desired. 128.It Fl i Ar extension 129Edit files in-place similarly to 130.Fl I , 131but treat each file independently from other files. 132In particular, line numbers in each file start at 1, 133the 134.Dq $ 135address matches the last line of the current file, 136and address ranges are limited to the current file. 137(See 138.Sx "Sed Addresses" . ) 139The net result is as though each file were edited by a separate 140.Nm 141instance. 142.It Fl l 143Make output line buffered. 144.It Fl n 145By default, each line of input is echoed to the standard output after 146all of the commands have been applied to it. 147The 148.Fl n 149option suppresses this behavior. 150.It Fl r 151Same as 152.Fl E 153for compatibility with GNU sed. 154.It Fl u 155Make output unbuffered. 156.El 157.Pp 158The form of a 159.Nm 160command is as follows: 161.Pp 162.Dl [address[,address]]function[arguments] 163.Pp 164Whitespace may be inserted before the first address and the function 165portions of the command. 166.Pp 167Normally, 168.Nm 169cyclically copies a line of input, not including its terminating newline 170character, into a 171.Em "pattern space" , 172(unless there is something left after a 173.Dq D 174function), 175applies all of the commands with addresses that select that pattern space, 176copies the pattern space to the standard output, appending a newline, and 177deletes the pattern space. 178.Pp 179Some of the functions use a 180.Em "hold space" 181to save all or part of the pattern space for subsequent retrieval. 182.Sh "Sed Addresses" 183An address is not required, but if specified must have one of the 184following formats: 185.Bl -bullet -offset indent 186.It 187a number that counts 188input lines 189cumulatively across input files (or in each file independently 190if a 191.Fl i 192option is in effect); 193.It 194a dollar 195.Pq Dq $ 196character that addresses the last line of input (or the last line 197of the current file if a 198.Fl i 199option was specified); 200.It 201a context address 202that consists of a regular expression preceded and followed by a 203delimiter. 204The closing delimiter can also optionally be followed by the 205.Dq I 206character, to indicate that the regular expression is to be matched 207in a case-insensitive way. 208.El 209.Pp 210A command line with no addresses selects every pattern space. 211.Pp 212A command line with one address selects all of the pattern spaces 213that match the address. 214.Pp 215A command line with two addresses selects an inclusive range. 216This 217range starts with the first pattern space that matches the first 218address. 219The end of the range is the next following pattern space 220that matches the second address. 221If the second address is a number 222less than or equal to the line number first selected, only that 223line is selected. 224The number in the second address may be prefixed with a 225.Pq Dq \&+ 226to specify the number of lines to match after the first pattern. 227In the case when the second address is a context 228address, 229.Nm 230does not re-match the second address against the 231pattern space that matched the first address. 232Starting at the 233first line following the selected range, 234.Nm 235starts looking again for the first address. 236.Pp 237Editing commands can be applied to non-selected pattern spaces by use 238of the exclamation character 239.Pq Dq \&! 240function. 241.Sh "Sed Regular Expressions" 242The regular expressions used in 243.Nm , 244by default, are basic regular expressions (BREs, see 245.Xr re_format 7 246for more information), but extended (modern) regular expressions can be used 247instead if the 248.Fl E 249flag is given. 250In addition, 251.Nm 252has the following two additions to regular expressions: 253.Pp 254.Bl -enum -compact 255.It 256In a context address, any character other than a backslash 257.Pq Dq \e 258or newline character may be used to delimit the regular expression. 259The opening delimiter needs to be preceded by a backslash 260unless it is a slash. 261For example, the context address 262.Li \exabcx 263is equivalent to 264.Li /abc/ . 265Also, putting a backslash character before the delimiting character 266within the regular expression causes the character to be treated literally. 267For example, in the context address 268.Li \exabc\exdefx , 269the RE delimiter is an 270.Dq x 271and the second 272.Dq x 273stands for itself, so that the regular expression is 274.Dq abcxdef . 275.Pp 276.It 277The escape sequence \en matches a newline character embedded in the 278pattern space. 279You cannot, however, use a literal newline character in an address or 280in the substitute command. 281.El 282.Pp 283One special feature of 284.Nm 285regular expressions is that they can default to the last regular 286expression used. 287If a regular expression is empty, i.e., just the delimiter characters 288are specified, the last regular expression encountered is used instead. 289The last regular expression is defined as the last regular expression 290used as part of an address or substitute command, and at run-time, not 291compile-time. 292For example, the command 293.Dq /abc/s//XXX/ 294will substitute 295.Dq XXX 296for the pattern 297.Dq abc . 298.Sh "Sed Functions" 299In the following list of commands, the maximum number of permissible 300addresses for each command is indicated by [0addr], [1addr], or [2addr], 301representing zero, one, or two addresses. 302.Pp 303The argument 304.Em text 305consists of one or more lines. 306To embed a newline in the text, precede it with a backslash. 307Other backslashes in text are deleted and the following character 308taken literally. 309.Pp 310The 311.Dq r 312and 313.Dq w 314functions take an optional file parameter, which should be separated 315from the function letter by white space. 316Each file given as an argument to 317.Nm 318is created (or its contents truncated) before any input processing begins. 319.Pp 320The 321.Dq b , 322.Dq r , 323.Dq s , 324.Dq t , 325.Dq w , 326.Dq y , 327.Dq \&! , 328and 329.Dq \&: 330functions all accept additional arguments. 331The following synopses indicate which arguments have to be separated from 332the function letters by white space characters. 333.Pp 334Two of the functions take a function-list. 335This is a list of 336.Nm 337functions separated by newlines, as follows: 338.Bd -literal -offset indent 339{ function 340 function 341 ... 342 function 343} 344.Ed 345.Pp 346The 347.Dq { 348can be preceded by white space and can be followed by white space. 349The function can be preceded by white space. 350The terminating 351.Dq } 352must be preceded by a newline, and may also be preceded by white space. 353.Pp 354.Bl -tag -width "XXXXXX" -compact 355.It [2addr] function-list 356Execute function-list only when the pattern space is selected. 357.Pp 358.It [1addr]a\e 359.It text 360Write 361.Em text 362to standard output immediately before each attempt to read a line of input, 363whether by executing the 364.Dq N 365function or by beginning a new cycle. 366.Pp 367.It [2addr]b[label] 368Branch to the 369.Dq \&: 370function with the specified label. 371If the label is not specified, branch to the end of the script. 372.Pp 373.It [2addr]c\e 374.It text 375Delete the pattern space. 376With 0 or 1 address or at the end of a 2-address range, 377.Em text 378is written to the standard output. 379.Pp 380.It [2addr]d 381Delete the pattern space and start the next cycle. 382.Pp 383.It [2addr]D 384Delete the initial segment of the pattern space through the first 385newline character and start the next cycle. 386.Pp 387.It [2addr]g 388Replace the contents of the pattern space with the contents of the 389hold space. 390.Pp 391.It [2addr]G 392Append a newline character followed by the contents of the hold space 393to the pattern space. 394.Pp 395.It [2addr]h 396Replace the contents of the hold space with the contents of the 397pattern space. 398.Pp 399.It [2addr]H 400Append a newline character followed by the contents of the pattern space 401to the hold space. 402.Pp 403.It [1addr]i\e 404.It text 405Write 406.Em text 407to the standard output. 408.Pp 409.It [2addr]l 410(The letter ell.) 411Write the pattern space to the standard output in a visually unambiguous 412form. 413This form is as follows: 414.Pp 415.Bl -tag -width "carriage-returnXX" -offset indent -compact 416.It backslash 417\e\e 418.It alert 419\ea 420.It form-feed 421\ef 422.It carriage-return 423\er 424.It tab 425\et 426.It vertical tab 427\ev 428.El 429.Pp 430Nonprintable characters are written as three-digit octal numbers (with a 431preceding backslash) for each byte in the character (most significant byte 432first). 433Long lines are folded, with the point of folding indicated by displaying 434a backslash followed by a newline. 435The end of each line is marked with a 436.Dq $ . 437.Pp 438.It [2addr]n 439Write the pattern space to the standard output if the default output has 440not been suppressed, and replace the pattern space with the next line of 441input. 442.Pp 443.It [2addr]N 444Append the next line of input to the pattern space, using an embedded 445newline character to separate the appended material from the original 446contents. 447Note that the current line number changes. 448.Pp 449.It [2addr]p 450Write the pattern space to standard output. 451.Pp 452.It [2addr]P 453Write the pattern space, up to the first newline character to the 454standard output. 455.Pp 456.It [1addr]q 457Branch to the end of the script and quit without starting a new cycle. 458.Pp 459.It [1addr]r file 460Copy the contents of 461.Em file 462to the standard output immediately before the next attempt to read a 463line of input. 464If 465.Em file 466cannot be read for any reason, it is silently ignored and no error 467condition is set. 468.Pp 469.It [2addr]s/regular expression/replacement/flags 470Substitute the replacement string for the first instance of the regular 471expression in the pattern space. 472Any character other than backslash or newline can be used instead of 473a slash to delimit the RE and the replacement. 474Within the RE and the replacement, the RE delimiter itself can be used as 475a literal character if it is preceded by a backslash. 476.Pp 477An ampersand 478.Pq Dq & 479appearing in the replacement is replaced by the string matching the RE. 480The special meaning of 481.Dq & 482in this context can be suppressed by preceding it by a backslash. 483The string 484.Dq \e# , 485where 486.Dq # 487is a digit, is replaced by the text matched 488by the corresponding backreference expression (see 489.Xr re_format 7 ) . 490.Pp 491A line can be split by substituting a newline character into it. 492To specify a newline character in the replacement string, precede it with 493a backslash. 494.Pp 495The value of 496.Em flags 497in the substitute function is zero or more of the following: 498.Bl -tag -width "XXXXXX" -offset indent 499.It Ar N 500Make the substitution only for the 501.Ar N Ns 'th 502occurrence of the regular expression in the pattern space. 503.It g 504Make the substitution for all non-overlapping matches of the 505regular expression, not just the first one. 506.It p 507Write the pattern space to standard output if a replacement was made. 508If the replacement string is identical to that which it replaces, it 509is still considered to have been a replacement. 510.It w Em file 511Append the pattern space to 512.Em file 513if a replacement was made. 514If the replacement string is identical to that which it replaces, it 515is still considered to have been a replacement. 516.It i or I 517Match the regular expression in a case-insensitive way. 518.El 519.Pp 520.It [2addr]t [label] 521Branch to the 522.Dq \&: 523function bearing the label if any substitutions have been made since the 524most recent reading of an input line or execution of a 525.Dq t 526function. 527If no label is specified, branch to the end of the script. 528.Pp 529.It [2addr]w Em file 530Append the pattern space to the 531.Em file . 532.Pp 533.It [2addr]x 534Swap the contents of the pattern and hold spaces. 535.Pp 536.It [2addr]y/string1/string2/ 537Replace all occurrences of characters in 538.Em string1 539in the pattern space with the corresponding characters from 540.Em string2 . 541Any character other than a backslash or newline can be used instead of 542a slash to delimit the strings. 543Within 544.Em string1 545and 546.Em string2 , 547a backslash followed by any character other than a newline is that literal 548character, and a backslash followed by an ``n'' is replaced by a newline 549character. 550.Pp 551.It [2addr]!function 552.It [2addr]!function-list 553Apply the function or function-list only to the lines that are 554.Em not 555selected by the address(es). 556.Pp 557.It [0addr]:label 558This function does nothing; it bears a label to which the 559.Dq b 560and 561.Dq t 562commands may branch. 563.Pp 564.It [1addr]= 565Write the line number to the standard output followed by a newline 566character. 567.Pp 568.It [0addr] 569Empty lines are ignored. 570.Pp 571.It [0addr]# 572The 573.Dq # 574and the remainder of the line are ignored (treated as a comment), with 575the single exception that if the first two characters in the file are 576.Dq #n , 577the default output is suppressed. 578This is the same as specifying the 579.Fl n 580option on the command line. 581.El 582.Sh ENVIRONMENT 583The 584.Ev COLUMNS , LANG , LC_ALL , LC_CTYPE 585and 586.Ev LC_COLLATE 587environment variables affect the execution of 588.Nm 589as described in 590.Xr environ 7 . 591.Sh EXIT STATUS 592.Ex -std 593.Sh EXAMPLES 594Replace 595.Ql bar 596with 597.Ql baz 598when piped from another command: 599.Bd -literal -offset indent 600echo "An alternate word, like bar, is sometimes used in examples." | sed 's/bar/baz/' 601.Ed 602.Pp 603Using backlashes can sometimes be hard to read and follow: 604.Bd -literal -offset indent 605echo "/home/example" | sed 's/\\/home\\/example/\\/usr\\/local\\/example/' 606.Ed 607.Pp 608Using a different separator can be handy when working with paths: 609.Bd -literal -offset indent 610echo "/home/example" | sed 's#/home/example#/usr/local/example#' 611.Ed 612.Pp 613Replace all occurrences of 614.Ql foo 615with 616.Ql bar 617in the file 618.Pa test.txt , 619without creating a backup of the file: 620.Bd -literal -offset indent 621sed -i '' -e 's/foo/bar/g' test.txt 622.Ed 623.Sh SEE ALSO 624.Xr awk 1 , 625.Xr ed 1 , 626.Xr grep 1 , 627.Xr regex 3 , 628.Xr re_format 7 629.Rs 630.\" 4.4BSD USD:15 631.%A Lee E. McMahon 632.%I AT&T Bell Laboratories 633.%T SED \(em A Non-interactive Text Editor 634.%R Computing Science Technical Report 635.%N 77 636.%D January 1979 637.Re 638.Sh STANDARDS 639The 640.Nm 641utility is expected to be a superset of the 642.St -p1003.2 643specification. 644.Pp 645The 646.Fl E , I , a 647and 648.Fl i 649options, the special meaning of 650.Fl f Cm - , 651the prefixing 652.Dq \&+ 653in the second member of an address range, 654as well as the 655.Dq I 656flag to the address regular expression and substitution command are 657non-standard 658.Fx 659extensions and may not be available on other operating systems. 660.Sh HISTORY 661A 662.Nm 663command, written by 664.An L. E. McMahon , 665appeared in 666.At v7 . 667.Sh AUTHORS 668.An Diomidis D. Spinellis Aq Mt dds@FreeBSD.org 669.Sh BUGS 670Multibyte characters containing a byte with value 0x5C 671.Tn ( ASCII 672.Ql \e ) 673may be incorrectly treated as line continuation characters in arguments to the 674.Dq a , 675.Dq c 676and 677.Dq i 678commands. 679Multibyte characters cannot be used as delimiters with the 680.Dq s 681and 682.Dq y 683commands. 684