I was wondering if it was possible to split a file into equal parts (edit: = all equal except for the last), without breaking the line? Using the split command in Unix, lines may be broken in half. Is there a way to, say, split up a file in 5 equal parts, but have it still only consist of whole lines (it's no problem if one of the files is a little larger or smaller)? I know I could just calculate the number of lines, but I have to do this for a lot of files in a bash script. Many thanks!
If you mean an equal number of lines, split
has an option for this:
split --lines=75
If you need to know what that 75
should really be for N
equal parts, its:
lines_per_part = int(total_lines + N - 1) / N
where total lines can be obtained with wc -l
.
See the following script for an example:
#!/usr/bin/bash
# Configuration stuff
fspec=qq.c
num_files=6
# Work out lines per file.
total_lines=$(wc -l <${fspec})
((lines_per_file = (total_lines + num_files - 1) / num_files))
# Split the actual file, maintaining lines.
split --lines=${lines_per_file} ${fspec} xyzzy.
# Debug information
echo "Total lines = ${total_lines}"
echo "Lines per file = ${lines_per_file}"
wc -l xyzzy.*
This outputs:
Total lines = 70
Lines per file = 12
12 xyzzy.aa
12 xyzzy.ab
12 xyzzy.ac
12 xyzzy.ad
12 xyzzy.ae
10 xyzzy.af
70 total
More recent versions of split
allow you to specify a number of CHUNKS
with the -n/--number
option. You can therefore use something like:
split --number=l/6 ${fspec} xyzzy.
(that's ell-slash-six
, meaning lines
, not one-slash-six
).
That will give you roughly equal files in terms of size, with no mid-line splits.
I mention that last point because it doesn't give you roughly the same number of lines in each file, more the same number of characters.
So, if you have one 20-character line and 19 1-character lines (twenty lines in total) and split to five files, you most likely won't get four lines in every file.