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Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Help to make awk script more efficient for large files Post 302525451 by script_op2a on Thursday 26th of May 2011 05:17:11 PM
Old 05-26-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by DGPickett
Use GNU Awk? "sort ... | uniq -d | wc -l | read dup_ct"
Hello, thank you very mucho for your post,

Do you mean using sort instead of awk? Do you think I could do it using only sort?
If so, could you explain the different piped sections?

Let me see if I understand:

sort |
this pipes the sorted input file to the uniq command (d option keeps only 1 of the duplicate lines) pipes to wc - l count # of non-duplicates? pipes to the read..

I'm not sure what the read command does in this case.

I'm also thinking about and will surely post the final code on this thread.

I need to sort the input file based on the key columns specificed for a particular file.
Say columns 1,2 and 3 to keep it simple. And use say column 4 (which is a datetime column) to determine which record to keep.

If I used sort to put that greatest column 4 value on top then use awk to just remove all the duplicates execept the 1st index of it.

Perhaps using code from this post where the same error was encountered:

https://www.unix.com/shell-programmin...based-key.html
Code:
awk -F "," ' NR == FNR {   cnt[$1] ++ } NR != FNR {   if (cnt[$1] == 1)     print $0 }' your-file your-file

I thinking about mixing the sort with that type of awk code to make it work for large files.

If you have any more ideas, suggestion or code sample please let me know.
 

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JOIN(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   JOIN(1)

NAME
join - relational database operator SYNOPSIS
join [ options ] file1 file2 DESCRIPTION
Join forms, on the standard output, a join of the two relations specified by the lines of file1 and file2. If one of the file names is the standard input is used. File1 and file2 must be sorted in increasing ASCII collating sequence on the fields on which they are to be joined, normally the first in each line. There is one line in the output for each pair of lines in file1 and file2 that have identical join fields. The output line normally con- sists of the common field, then the rest of the line from file1, then the rest of the line from file2. Input fields are normally separated spaces or tabs; output fields by space. In this case, multiple separators count as one, and leading separators are discarded. The following options are recognized, with POSIX syntax. -a n In addition to the normal output, produce a line for each unpairable line in file n, where n is 1 or 2. -v n Like -a, omitting output for paired lines. -e s Replace empty output fields by string s. -1 m -2 m Join on the mth field of file1 or file2. -jn m Archaic equivalent for -n m. -ofields Each output line comprises the designated fields. The comma-separated field designators are either 0, meaning the join field, or have the form n.m, where n is a file number and m is a field number. Archaic usage allows separate arguments for field designators. -tc Use character c as the only separator (tab character) on input and output. Every appearance of c in a line is significant. EXAMPLES
sort /adm/users | join -t: -a 1 -e "" - bdays Add birthdays to password information, leaving unknown birthdays empty. The layout of is given in users(6); bdays contains sorted lines like tr : ' ' </adm/users | sort -k 3 3 >temp join -1 3 -2 3 -o 1.1,2.1 temp temp | awk '$1 < $2' Print all pairs of users with identical userids. SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/join.c SEE ALSO
sort(1), comm(1), awk(1) BUGS
With default field separation, the collating sequence is that of sort -b -ky,y; with -t, the sequence is that of sort -tx -ky,y. One of the files must be randomly accessible. JOIN(1)
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