SORT(1) BSD Reference Manual SORT(1)NAMEsort - sort or merge text files
SYNOPSISsort [-cmubdfinr] [-R char] [-t char]
[-T directory] [-k field1[,field2]] ... [-o output] [file] ...
DESCRIPTION
The sort utility sorts text files by lines. Comparisons are based on one
or more sort keys extracted from each line of input, and are performed
lexicographically. By default, if keys are not given, sort regards each
input line as a single field.
The following options are available:
-c Check that the single input file is sorted. If the file is not
sorted, sort produces the appropriate error messages and exits
with code 1; otherwise, sort returns 0. Sort -c produces no out-
put.
-m Merge only; the input files are assumed to be pre-sorted.
-o output
The argument given is the name of an output file to be used in-
stead of the standard output. This file can be the same as one
of the input files.
-T directory
Directory is the name of a directory in which to create temporary
files.
-u Unique: suppress all but one in each set of lines having equal
keys. If used with the -c option, check that there are no lines
with duplicate keys.
The following options override the default ordering rules. When ordering
options appear independent of key field specifications, the requested
field ordering rules are applied globally to all sort keys. When at-
tached to a specific key (see -k), the ordering options override all
global ordering options for that key.
-d Only blank space and alphanumeric characters are used in making
comparisons.
-f Considers all lowercase characters that have uppercase equiva-
lents to be the same for purposes of comparison.
-i Ignore all non-printable characters.
-n An initial numeric string, consisting of optional blank space,
optional minus sign, and zero or more digits (including decimal
point) is sorted by arithmetic value. (The -n option no longer
implies the -b option.)
-r Reverse the sense of comparisons.
The treatment of field separators can be altered using the options:
-b Ignores leading blank space when determining the start and end of
a restricted sort key. A -b option specified before the first -k
option applies globally to all -k options. Otherwise, the -b op-
tion can be attached independently to each field argument of the
-k option (see below). Note that the -b option has no effect un-
less key fields are specified.
-k field1[,field2]
Designates the starting position, field1, and optional ending po-
sition, field2, of a key field. The -k option replaces the obso-
lescent options +pos1 and -pos2.
-R char
Char is used as the record separator character. This should be
used with discretion; -R <alphanumeric> usually produces undesir-
able results. The default line separator is newline.
-t char
Char is used as the field separator character. The initial char
is not considered to be part of a field when determining key off-
sets (see below). Each occurrence of char is significant (for
example, ``charchar'' delimits an empty field). If -t is not
specified, blank space characters are used as default field sepa-
rators.
The following operands are available:
file The pathname of a file to be sorted, merged, or checked. If no
file operands are specified, or if a file operand is -, the stan-
dard input is used.
A field is defined as a minimal sequence of characters followed by a
field separator or a newline character. By default, the first blank
space of a sequence of blank spaces acts as the field separator. All
blank spaces in a sequence of blank spaces are considered as part of the
next field; for example, all blank spaces at the beginning of a line are
considered to be part of the first field.
Fields are specified by the -k field1[,field2] argument. A missing field2
argument defaults to the end of a line.
The arguments field1 and field2 have the form m.n followed by one or more
of the options b, d, f, i, n, r. A field1 position specified by m.n (m,n
> 0) is interpreted as the nth character in the mth field. A missing .n
in field1 means `.1', indicating the first character of the mth field; If
the -b option is in effect, n is counted from the first non-blank charac-
ter in the mth field; m.1b refers to the first non-blank character in the
mth field.
A field2 position specified by m.n is interpreted as the nth character
(including separators) of the mth field. A missing .n indicates the last
character of the mth field; m = 0 designates the end of a line. Thus the
option -k v.x,w.y is synonymous with the obsolescent option +v-1.x-1
-w-1.y; when y is omitted, -k v.x,w is synonymous with +v-1.x-1 -w+1.0.
-W.0b has no -k equivalent and is no longer supported. Otherwise the
+pos1 -pos2 option still works.
The sort command uses lexicographic radix sorting, which requires that
sort keys be kept in memory (as opposed to historic implementations of
sort which used quick and merge sorts and did not.) For this reason,
performance depends highly on efficient choice of sort keys, and the -b
option and the field2 argument of the -k option should be used whenever
possible. Similarly, ``sort -k1f'' is equivalent to ``sort -f'' and may
take twice as long.
The sort utility does not sort stably, and the order in which lines that
compare equally are displayed is unspecified.
FILES
/var/tmp/sort.*, /tmp/sort.* Default temporary directories (in order
of search).
output#PID Temporary name for output if output al-
ready exists.
SEE ALSOcomm(1), join(1), uniq(1), radixsort(3)RETURN VALUES
Sort exits with one of the following values:
0: normal behavior.
1: on disorder (or non-uniqueness) with the -c option
2: an error occurred.
BUGS
Lines which are longer than 65522 are discarded and processing continues.
To sort files larger than 60Mb, use sort -H; files larger than 704Mb must
be sorted in smaller pieces, then merged. To protect data sort-o calls
link and unlink, and thus fails in protected directories; in particular
it fails in /dev, where standard output must be used.
HISTORY
A sort command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX.
BSDI BSD/OS June 27, 1991 3