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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Splitting a delimited text file Post 302899372 by Don Cragun on Monday 28th of April 2014 04:07:51 PM
Old 04-28-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by lupin..the..3rd
On my system (HP-UX 11.31) I get:

awk: Input line Disposition: attachm cannot be longer than 3,000 bytes.
The input line number is 53. The file is qsubmit.processed.dump.
The source line number is 1.

FYI the input file has emails as large as several megabytes (because of mime encoded attachments).

Thanks!

---------- Post updated at 11:48 AM ---------- Previous update was at 11:47 AM ----------



Dropping them is ideal, but not necessarily a problem for me, as I can "grep -v" to remove them in a second pass.

---------- Post updated at 03:50 PM ---------- Previous update was at 11:48 AM ----------

Ok, I got what I needed using this. Thank you all for the helpful ideas, it got me pointed down the right path.

Code:
csplit -n 5 $1 /-dump-/ {*}

for i in $(ls xx*); do
  awk 'NR > 2' $i > ./output/$i.eml
  rm $i
done

Just out of curiosity, why did you decide not to use the awk script I suggested?
Code:
awk '
/^--dump/ {
	if(ofn != "") close(ofn)
	ofn = sprintf("message:%07d", ++f)
	next
}
{	print > ofn
}' dump

It only invokes awk once (instead of once per extracted message) and only reads and writes the data found in your input file once (instead of twice); so it should be considerably faster.
 

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OD(1)                                                              User Commands                                                             OD(1)

NAME
od - dump files in octal and other formats SYNOPSIS
od [OPTION]... [FILE]... od [-abcdfilosx]... [FILE] [[+]OFFSET[.][b]] od --traditional [OPTION]... [FILE] [[+]OFFSET[.][b] [+][LABEL][.][b]] DESCRIPTION
Write an unambiguous representation, octal bytes by default, of FILE to standard output. With more than one FILE argument, concatenate them in the listed order to form the input. With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input. If first and second call formats both apply, the second format is assumed if the last operand begins with + or (if there are 2 operands) a digit. An OFFSET operand means -j OFFSET. LABEL is the pseudo-address at first byte printed, incremented when dump is progressing. For OFFSET and LABEL, a 0x or 0X prefix indicates hexadecimal; suffixes may be . for octal and b for multiply by 512. Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too. -A, --address-radix=RADIX output format for file offsets; RADIX is one of [doxn], for Decimal, Octal, Hex or None --endian={big|little} swap input bytes according the specified order -j, --skip-bytes=BYTES skip BYTES input bytes first -N, --read-bytes=BYTES limit dump to BYTES input bytes -S BYTES, --strings[=BYTES] output strings of at least BYTES graphic chars; 3 is implied when BYTES is not specified -t, --format=TYPE select output format or formats -v, --output-duplicates do not use * to mark line suppression -w[BYTES], --width[=BYTES] output BYTES bytes per output line; 32 is implied when BYTES is not specified --traditional accept arguments in third form above --help display this help and exit --version output version information and exit Traditional format specifications may be intermixed; they accumulate: -a same as -t a, select named characters, ignoring high-order bit -b same as -t o1, select octal bytes -c same as -t c, select printable characters or backslash escapes -d same as -t u2, select unsigned decimal 2-byte units -f same as -t fF, select floats -i same as -t dI, select decimal ints -l same as -t dL, select decimal longs -o same as -t o2, select octal 2-byte units -s same as -t d2, select decimal 2-byte units -x same as -t x2, select hexadecimal 2-byte units TYPE is made up of one or more of these specifications: a named character, ignoring high-order bit c printable character or backslash escape d[SIZE] signed decimal, SIZE bytes per integer f[SIZE] floating point, SIZE bytes per float o[SIZE] octal, SIZE bytes per integer u[SIZE] unsigned decimal, SIZE bytes per integer x[SIZE] hexadecimal, SIZE bytes per integer SIZE is a number. For TYPE in [doux], SIZE may also be C for sizeof(char), S for sizeof(short), I for sizeof(int) or L for sizeof(long). If TYPE is f, SIZE may also be F for sizeof(float), D for sizeof(double) or L for sizeof(long double). Adding a z suffix to any type displays printable characters at the end of each output line. BYTES is hex with 0x or 0X prefix, and may have a multiplier suffix: b 512 KB 1000 K 1024 MB 1000*1000 M 1024*1024 and so on for G, T, P, E, Z, Y. EXAMPLES
od -A x -t x1z -v Display hexdump format output od -A o -t oS -w16 The default output format used by od AUTHOR
Written by Jim Meyering. REPORTING BUGS
GNU coreutils online help: <http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/> Report od translation bugs to <http://translationproject.org/team/> COPYRIGHT
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